| Literature DB >> 33019576 |
Pablo Pérez1,2, Juan Alfonso Serrano1,2, Alberto Olmo1,2.
Abstract
Three-dimensional printing technologies have been recently proposed to monitor cell cultures and implement cell bioreactors for different biological applications. In tissue engineering, the control of tissue formation is crucial to form tissue constructs of clinical relevance, and 3D printing technologies can also play an important role for this purpose. In this work, we study 3D-printed sensors that have been recently used in cell culture and tissue engineering applications in biological laboratories, with a special focus on the technique of electrical impedance spectroscopy. Furthermore, we study new 3D-printed actuators used for the stimulation of stem cells cultures, which is of high importance in the process of tissue formation and regenerative medicine. Key challenges and open issues, such as the use of 3D printing techniques in implantable devices for regenerative medicine, are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: 3D-printed actuators; 3D-printed sensors; electrical impedance spectroscopy; electrostimulation; tissue engineering
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33019576 PMCID: PMC7582847 DOI: 10.3390/s20195617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Main 3D printing technologies, advantages and limitations.
| 3D Printing Technology | Materials Used | Advantages | Limitations | Main Uses | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | (Conductive) thermoplastics | Multi-material (heterogeneous) structures, biocompatibility, low cost. | Low resolution, rough surface (low cell visibility and adherence) | Cell chamber, bioreactor container | [ |
| Inkjet based methods | Liquid photopolymers | High accuracy, excellent repeatability, heterogenous materials | Poor mechanical properties, fragile parts | Electrode fabrication | [ |
| Powder bed fusion (SLM, SLS, SHS, EBM, etc.) | Powdered plastic, metal, ceramic, etc. | High accuracy, high strength, biocompatibility, | High cost, limited mechanical properties | Metallic scaffolds, bioreactor container | [ |
| Stereolithography | Photopolymers | High accuracy, heterogenous materials | Low biocompatibility | Electrochemical sensors | [ |
Figure 1PCB—3D-printed device for the study of impedance spectroscopy in 2D cell cultures. (a) Design of the device with four wells for impedance spectroscopy measurements of aqueous solutions and top view of the electrode array of one well. (b) Photograph of four 3D-printed reusable wells, each one with 1 mL of an aqueous solution. Reproduced from Cabrera-López et al. [12].
Figure 23D-printed PETG well for cell culture monitoring. (a) Cross section of the cell chamber with the 3D immobilization matrix. (b) Photograph of the well and the electrodes interface. Reproduced from Paivana et al. [29].
Figure 3Multi-material 3D-printed bioreactor for cell culture monitoring. (a) Bioreactor design. (b) Bioreactor implementation in PLA and conductive PLA. (c) PETG used as printing material for the bioreactor. (d) Microscope image of the PETG surface. Roughness of one of the sides of its surface due to the printing filament is clearly observed. Reproduced from Rodríguez et al. [11].
Figure 43D-printed electrostimulator for cardiomyocyte cell cultures. (a) Complete setup for electrical stimulation and detail of a single well. (b) Photograph of the experimental setup used in one well, with the cell culture scaffold in the middle of the carbon electrodes. Reproduced from Scott et al. [40].
Main applications found, advantages and limitations.
| Application | Use and Materials | Advantages | Reported Limitations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2D cell culture monitoring | Cell chamber (PLA, PETG, ABS), sensing electrode | Affordability, customization | Precision, rough surface, non-visibility to microscope | [ |
| 3D cell culture monitoring | Cell chamber (PLA, PET) | Affordability, customization | Non-visibility to microscope | [ |
| Neuron electrostimulation | Cell chamber (PLA) | Affordability, customization | Possible long-term toxicity | [ |
| Cardiomyocyte electrostimulation | Cell chamber (silicone rubber/PCL) | Customization, improved cell proliferation | Poorer cell adherence in silicone, more detailed analysis needed | [ |
| Bone electrostimulation | Scaffolds fabrication and electrostimulation electrode (graphene/PCL) | Customization, improved cell proliferation | --- | [ |
| Electrical and heat stimulation | Cell chamber | Affordability, customization | Low | [ |
| Mechanical stimulation of cells/tissues | Cell culture chamber housing | Customization, facility to assemble and use | Low | [ |