| Literature DB >> 33492960 |
Hepi H Susapto1, Dana Alhattab1, Sherin Abdelrahman1, Zainab Khan1, Salwa Alshehri1, Kowther Kahin1, Rui Ge1, Manola Moretti1, Abdul-Hamid Emwas2, Charlotte A E Hauser1.
Abstract
We report about rationally designed ultrashort peptide bioinks, overcoming severe limitations in current bioprinting procedures. Bioprinting is increasingly relevant in tissue engineering, regenerative and personalized medicine due to its ability to fabricate complex tissue scaffolds through an automated deposition process. Printing stable large-scale constructs with high shape fidelity and enabling long-term cell survival are major challenges that most existing bioinks are unable to solve. Additionally, they require chemical or UV-cross-linking for the structure-solidifying process which compromises the encapsulated cells, resulting in restricted structure complexity and low cell viability. Using ultrashort peptide bioinks as ideal bodylike but synthetic material, we demonstrate an instant solidifying cell-embedding printing process via a sophisticated extrusion procedure under true physiological conditions and at cost-effective low bioink concentrations. Our printed large-scale cell constructs and the chondrogenic differentiation of printed mesenchymal stem cells point to the strong potential of the peptide bioinks for automated complex tissue fabrication.Keywords: Molecular self-assembly; automated 3D bioprinting; peptide bioinks; postprinting differentiation; ultrashort peptides
Year: 2021 PMID: 33492960 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c04426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189