| Literature DB >> 34230892 |
Arpana Parihar1,2, Vasundhara Pandita1, Avinash Kumar3, Dipesh Singh Parihar4, Nidhi Puranik1, Tapas Bajpai5, Raju Khan2,6.
Abstract
Abstract: Organ or cell transplantation is medically evaluated for end-stage failure saving or extending the lives of thousands of patients who are suffering from organ failure disorders. The unavailability of adequate organs for transplantation to meet the existing demand is a major challenge in the medical field. This led to day-day-increase in the number of patients on transplant waiting lists as well as in the number of patients dying while on the queue. Recently, technological advancements in the field of biogenerative engineering have the potential to regenerate tissues and, in some cases, create new tissues and organs. In this context, major advances and innovations are being made in the fields of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine which have a huge impact on the scientific community is three-dimensional bioprinting (3D bioprinting) of tissues and organs. Besides this, the decellularization of organs and using this as a scaffold for generating new organs through the recellularization process shows promising results. This review discussed about current approaches for tissue and organ engineering including methods of scaffold designing, recent advances in 3D bioprinting, organs regenerated successfully using 3D printing, and extended application of 3D bioprinting technique in the field of medicine. Besides this, information about commercially available 3D printers has also been included in this article. Lay Summary: Today's need for organs for the transplantation process in order to save a patient's life or to enhance the survival rate of diseased one is the prime concern among the scientific community. Recent, advances in the field of biogenerative engineering have the potential to regenerate tissues and create organs compatible with the patient's body. In this context, major advances and innovations are being made in the fields of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine which have a huge impact on the scientific community is three-dimensional bioprinting (3D bioprinting) of tissues and organs. Besides this, the decellularization of organs and using this as a scaffold for generating new organs through the recellularization process shows promising results. This review dealt with the current approaches for tissue and organ engineering including methods of scaffold designing, recent advances in 3D bioprinting, organs regenerated successfully using 3D printing, and extended application of 3D bioprinting technique in the field of medicine. Furthermore, information about commercially available 3D printers has also been included in this article. © The Regenerative Engineering Society 2021.Entities:
Keywords: 3D bioprinting; Decellularization; Drug efficacy testing; Organ donor; Organ transplantation; Scaffold designing
Year: 2021 PMID: 34230892 PMCID: PMC8252697 DOI: 10.1007/s40883-021-00219-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Regen Eng Transl Med ISSN: 2364-4141
Fig. 1Flowchart showing steps of scaffold designing: (a) computer simulation and modelling using CAD software. (b) MRI scanning of organ. (c) and (d) Anatomical and geometric designing of 3D structure according to tomographic information. (e) Scaffold fabrication and biomaterial and cell suspension selection (f) print the model
Fig. 2Process of decellularization: bioartificial organ development using decellularization and recellularization approach and its probable application
Techniques used to decellularized tissues and organs
| Decellularization methods | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S. no. | Types of methods | References | |||
| 1 | Enzymes | Trypsin | Endonucleases | Exonuclease | [ |
| 2 | Physical | Mechanical Agitation | Freeze/Thaw | Sonication | [ |
| 3 | Chemical | Alkaline/acid | Hypertonic/Hypotonic | EDTA EGTA | [ |
| 4 | Detergents | Non ionic •Triton X-100 | Ionic •Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate •Triton X-200 | Zwitterionic •CHAPS •Tri (n-butyl) phosphate | [ |
Fig. 3Hierarchical procedure of designing, printing, and post-printing assessment
Fig. 4Steps In 3D bioprinting: different steps and stages that lead to the production of bioprinted constructs for implantation or in vitro testing
Fig. 5Hierarchy chart of bioprinting techniques: (A) First division shows the types of bioprinting techniques. (B) Second division depicts the type of printers
Specific features such as resolution, speed, volume, stability, the viscosity of bioink, bioink type, cell density, and cost of five different types of bioprinting techniques
| Characteristics | Inkjet | Extrusion | Laser-assisted | Stereolithography | Fused deposition modelling | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resolution | 50-300 μm | Wide range | Microscale resolution | High | Low | [ |
| Speed | Fast (1-10,000 droplets s-1) | Slow (5mm s-1) | Medium (100 droplets s-1) | Slow | Fast | [ |
| Volume (capacity of bioink storage) | ml range | ml range | ˃500ml | Up to 300 x 335 x 200 mm | Up to ~200 x 200 x 300 mm | [ |
| Stability | Poor | Good | Fair | Good | Fair | [ |
| Viscosity of bioink | 3.5–12 mPa/s | up to above 6×107 mPa/s | 1–300 mPa/s | No limitation | 5 mPa/s | [ |
| Bioink type | Cell suspension | Viscous materials | Cell suspension, Viscous materials | Photosensitive Resins | Thermoplastics such as PLA, PLLA, Nylon, PCL, PLGA | [ |
| Cell density | Low (<106 cells ml-1) | High (cell spheroids) | Medium | Medium / no limitation | low | [ |
| Cost | Low | Medium | High | High | Low | [ |
| Specific characteristic | Materials used are low cost; contactless sterile printing | Commercially available | Compatible | Limited material | Limited material | [ |
Fig. 6Type of bioprinting approaches and their working methods. (a) Workflow of designing the bioink for printers involves the living cell suspension and biomaterials. (b) Inkjet-based printing extrudes out the fractions of molecules of bioink. (c) Laser-based bioprinting involves the use of laser focused on absorbing layer, high gas pressure generated by affected area induces the bioink onto the printing bed; (d) Extrusion-based bioprinting uses mechanical pressure to frequently extrude out bioink (cell-polymer solution).finally, the scaffold is made layer by layer. (e) The medicinal approach in tissue engineering, drug testing, and designing for in vitro study model for disease diagnosis
Different 3D printing technique for bioprinting of various organ and tissues
| Target organ/tissue | Printing technique | Bioink | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin | Droplet/inkjet | i Cell suspended media for printing cells ii Collagen solution for printing the supportive layer iii Hydrogel | [ |
| Laser assisted | Matriderm | ||
| Liver | Inkjet | i Cell suspended media for printing cells ii Fibronectin gelatine solution for printing adhesive film between monolayer | [ |
| Stereolithography | Gelatine methacrylate for printing hiPSC | [ | |
| Extrusion | Hepatocyte aggregates | [ | |
| Bone | Extrusion-based rapid EBM Prototyping (RP) | Natural and synthetic polymers solution | [ |
| Fused deposition modelling (FDM) | Synthetic polymers, such as acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), polylactic acid (PLA), Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) | [ | |
SLA/SLM Binderjetting, EBM | PPF/DEF-HA, PDLLA/HA, β-tricalcium phosphate (β-TCP) | [ | |
| Laser-assisted bioprinting | HA, Zirconia, HA/MG63 osteoblast-like cell, nano HA, human osteoprogenitor cell, Human umbilical vein endothelial cell | [ | |
| Cartilage | Pneumatic Extrusion based | Natural polymer solutions, such as alginate and proteins, cells, and growth factors can be incorporated | [ |
| Ear | Extrusion-Based -Rp | Natural or synthetic polymers solution | [ |
| craniofacial | Direct write RP | A concentrated colloidal gel (typically 50% of HA in an aqueous medium) | [ |
| Stereolithography | Polypropylene | [ | |
| Inkjet | PEEK, PLA, PLGA. | [ | |
| Extrusion (EBM) | Fibrinogen, Gelatin, Alginate | [ | |
| FDM | Titanium, PCL | [ | |
| Trochlea (rabbit) | Indirect microstereolithography | Poly- ( caprolactone)/gelatine, heparin, transforming growth factor beta 1, chondrocytes | [ |
| Bone defects | FDM (fused deposition modelling) Binderjetting, EBM | Hydroxyapatite incorporated polycaprolactone | [ |
| Endothelial progenitor cells | Thermal inkjet-based AM | Collagen solutions | [ |
| Breast cancer | Extrusion | i Breast cancer cell aggregates ii Stromal cell aggregates | [ |
| Cervical cancer | Extrusion | Gelatine -alginate-fibrinogen solution for printing cells | [ |
Commercially available bioprinters
| S. no. | Company | Name of 3D printer | Specialization | Specification | Remark | Reference (web link) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ORGANOVO | NovoGen MMX Bioprinter | Uses human cells and shapes them into real tissue. The printer ejects a liquid filled with thousands of human cells, guided by lasers. The process repeats, creating hundreds of layers of cells, held together with a gel. The cells begin to grow, meshing themselves together, as they would in the body, and into actual tissue | Technology: syringe-based extrusion Materials: cellular hydrogels | world’s first commercial 3D bioprinter to print human tissues. | |
| 2 | CELLINK | BIO X | Bioprinted tissue can be used in drug discovery where researchers can test new potential treatments and evaluate efficacy in very early stages. | •Layer thickness:50 - 300 Microns •Optical system: Integrated Germicidal UV C - 275 nm, Integrated UV Curing - 365, 405 nm •XYZ accuracy:2 micron •Closed print chamber: Yes, fully enclosed •Feeder system: Air Pressure Input •Extruder: Three •Print bed details: Heated bed •Weight :17kg | The built-in features along with the new BIO X software managed through the large touchscreen display minimize the learning curve and ensure you will receive the results you want | |
| 3 | TeVido Biodivices | TeVido’s Tru Pigment | Reconstructive and cosmetic surgery | TeVido Biodivices | uses high quality, cutting-edge processing techniques to prepare transplant material – made from a patient’s own living cells | |
| 4 | Aspect biosystems | RX1 Bioprinter | Bioprinting to study and treat brain diseases. | Materials: hydrogels Precise motion and pressure control enable microscale resolution at high speed | The Aspect RX1 3D Bioprinter enables the production of 3D heterogeneous and functional human tissues for applications in therapeutic development, regenerative medicine, and other areas in the life sciences | |
| 5 | Cyfuse Biomedical | 1.Regenova 2. S-PIKE | 1. Bone and Cartilage Regeneration 2. Vascular Regeneration 3. Neural Regeneration 4. Liver Structure | Weight: Total 450kg (Main body unit 430kg) Components: Main body unit (W1340×D825×H1740mm) Controller (W236×D272×H121mm) Compressor (W300×D382×H334mm) Power: 1.5kw (Main body unit 1.1kw) Operating Voltage: AC 100V | Development of 3D-structures from cells only It provides the only-one technology for researchers | |
| 6 | Digilab | Cell Jet 3D printer | The 3D-printed cells can be used for stem cell research, cancer biology, automated cell arrays, cell-cell or cell-drug interaction studies, tissue engineering or regenerative medicine. | Dynamic Dispense Range: 20nL to 1mL (with 190um ceramic tip, 1mL syringe and 1000ul loop) Dispense Speed: 30 seconds to dispense to a 96-well plate with a 1-channel system Dispense. Positioning Performance: Stepper Motor Resolution — 1.3um Repeatability < +10um | Has the unique capacity to print cells with 95 percent viability | |
| 7 | Bio3D | SYN^ and Explorer | The Bio3D SYN^ supports a variety of different biomaterials and non-biomaterials all together in one single 3D bio print. Those 3D printing biomaterials include: whole cells, bacteria, proteins, biogels, polymers, food materials. | Technology: syringe-based extrusionMaterials: polymers, hydrogels Max. print speed:0.47 mm/s Min. layer thickness :0.01 mm | Bio3D produces systems which are not modified or ported from existing industrial or consumer 3D printers. Their 3D bio printers are specially designed and built for scientific and research applications. | |
| 8 | Advanced solution life science | BioAssemblyBot | BioAssemblyBot precisely builds 3D tissue structures and models, automatically switching between up to 8 independent syringe barrels. | Technology: six-axes syringe-based extrusionMaterials: ND Dimensions 12" W x 20" H x 22" D 300mm x 520mm x 550mm Print Volume 176 in cubed 11,340mm cubed Resolution Z/R Linear Axis: 40 μin 10 μm Θ Rotary Axis: 40 μin 10 μm | listing all of its possible applications for cell systems and assays, experimental tissue models, organ models and microfluidic platforms. | |
| 9 | 1.3Dn Series 2.3Dn-DDM Series | nscrypt provides industrial precision microdispensing and direct digital manufacturing equipment with unmatched precision and quality | XY accuracy:0.015 mm Min. layer thickness:0.005 mm Weight:2722 kg Power input:120 VAC 20 A | can not only print out living cells but also extracellular matrices, collagen, hyaluronic acid and many more, while it creates Bioscaffolds such as biopolymers in any shape. | ||
| 10 | 3D-Bioplotter | Which is an open-source materials printer enabling researchers to produce customized and patient-specific silicones, thermoplastics, ceramic and metal pastes, hydrogels, often alongside living cells | Footprint (L x W x H): 976 x 623 x 773 mm (38.4” x 24.5” x 30.4”) Weight: 90-130 kg (depending on the model) Electrical Requirements: 100-240 V AC, 50/60 Hz Compressed Air Requirements: 6 - 10 bar (85 - 145 psi) Technology: syringe-based extrusionMaterials: hydrogels, silicone, hydroxyapatite, titanium, chitosan | The 3D Bioplotter is used by researchers for fabricating scaffolds using the widest range of materials, from soft hydrogels over polymer melts up to hard ceramics and metals. This machine is specially designed for work in sterile environments in a laminar flowbox, a requirement of biofabrication, for example, when using alginate cell suspensions for scaffold construction. | ||
| 3Dynamic Systems | Alpha & Omega | The 3Dynamic Alpha Series is a single extrusion bone tissue fabrication platform. The deposited material can be seeded with platelet-derived growth factor to create the right environment for tissue regeneration by recruiting stem cells that can produce bone and form a supportive structure, including blood vessels. The Omega Tissue Engineering Workstation is a dual extrusion 3D bioprinter used to generate heterogeneous tissues with a printable bioactive gel, protein growth factors. and scaffolds that mature into living tissue structures. | XY accuracy:0.75 mm Max. build size:150 × 150 × 60 mm Dimensions:500 × 500 × 500 mm Power input:15A 240V | 3D transplantable bone and complex tissue constructs on demand and successfully engineered a suitable bone composite and a 3D bioprinting technology to make high complexity tissue structures. | ||
| 12 | Nano3D Sciences(n3D | Nano 3D print | Using their Nano Shuttle technology, within a machine they call the Bio-Assembler, Nano3D is able to create 3-dimensional breast cancer tissue via the manipulation of cells using magnetic nanoparticles | Stage Dimensions: 214x186x160 (mm) / 8.4x7.3x6.3 (in) Stage Material: Removable glass heated bed Printing Layer Height: ≥ 0.02mm Positional Accuracy: XY axis: 0.011mm Z axis: 0.0025mm Nozzle Diameter: 0.4mm Max. Nozzle Flow Rate: 24cc/hour Max. Axis Moving Speed: 350mm/s Max. Nozzle Temp.: 270 °C Max. Heat Bed Temp.: 100 °C Machine Dimensions: 467x357x374mm Machine Weight: 13 kg (28.66 lbs) | they can either levitate or bioprint cells; and these cultures are faster to assemble than another system. Nano Shuttle, is able to create a plate of spheroids in 15 minutes to a few hours for medical research. | |
| 13 | Rokit In vivo 3D bioprinter | In vivo can print with a multitude of materials including PLGA, PCL, PLLA, collagen, alginate, and silk fibroin | Printing system: polymer extruder+ bio dispenser Resolution: extruder 0.2mm, dispenser 0.08mm Build volume: 100x100x80mm Printing speed: 3 to 20mm/sec | multi-use hybrid bioprinter | ||
| 14 | Tissue engineering and tissue regeneration becomes a promising approach e.g. to cure severe bone injuries. Artificial tissue grown from differentiable cells often needs to get in a particular 3-dimensional shape for implantation. Bio scaffolds can serve as a cell growth environment for artificial tissues, further supporting supply of the cells and removal of the metabolite | Technology: syringe based extrusion and piezoelectric nano liter pipetting Materials: polymers, high viscosity paste materials, alginate, calcium phosphate, silicon, cells and protein solutions Power input: 115-240V ACDimensions:975.36 × 622.3 × 772.16 mm38.4 × 24.5 × 30.4 in | The Bio Scaffolder 2.1 is a modular instrument platform with up to four independent z-axes for running several dispensing tools. It can be adapted to your application as well as to your budget. It provides pressure-driven 3D printing as well as piezoelectric Nanolitre pipetting on the same instrument. | https://www.medicalexpo.com/prod/gesim/product-68587-710354.html | ||
| 15 | V1 Bioprinter | This 3D bioprinter is adaptable to different types of tissues, to research the biggest unsolved biotechnology problems and to battle different kinds of pathologies, such as; Cardiovascular Disease (CVD), Peripheral Vascular Disease (PVD), Non-healing wounds, Spinal cord injury, Alzheimer´s Disease (AD), Parkinson´s Disease (PD), Musculoskeletal Disorders (MSDs), Autoimmune Disorders, Stroke, Diabetes, and Ocular Disease. | Head technologies IPF, IVF, FDM microextrusion Number of biomaterials 2 for FDM, up to 8 for IPF/IVF Nozzle diameter 0.1-0.5mm Build volume 150mmx150mmx110mm X axis resolution 150 μm Y axis resolution 150 μm Z axis resolution:400 nm | The REGEMAT3D is a | ||
| 16 | Allevi 3 | With the smallest footprint and widest material capabilities of any 3D bioprinter on the market, | •11.8 × 11.2 × 10.8 in •Dimensions Metric (W × H × D)30.0 × 28.3 × 27.5 cm •Weight15.5 lbs (7.0 kg) •Power Requirements AC 110V – 220V | With the Allevi 1 bioprinter, you can choose to cure biomaterials in either visible or ultraviolet light | ||
| 17 | NGB-R Bioprinter | It develops and produces human, customized tissues using 4D bioprinting for pharmaceutical and cosmetic applications as well as regenerative medicine | Cell resolution 1 to 100 cells per droplet Printing speed 10,000 droplets per sec Precision 10 μm Droplet volume from pL to nL Viscosity 20 to 300 mPa.s min. Cell concentration up to 100 millions per ml Min. bioink volume from 4μL | Combining laser-assisted, microvalve and extrusion bioprinting, it enables true versatility of bioprinting (from cell to spheroids) and offers the possibility of using a large number of biomaterials and hydrogels. | ||
| 18 | RegenHU | 3DDISCOVERY | For the driving force of scientific advancements in Tissue Engineering, Regenerative Medicine and Drug Discovery. | Work range:130x90x60 Precision:5 micrometer Modular printhead concept: General Temperature control: 0 to 80 degree C overall dimension: 600x700x670 mm | It provides | |
| 19 | 3D Bioprinting Solutions | FABION | Tissue spheroids -- cell aggregates. Depending on the type of cells, of which it is built, a spheroid will have certain properties. For example, if fabricated of endothelial cells, spheroids with lumens will be formed characteristic of the blood circulatory system. | Technology: multiple (photocuring, electromagnetic and extrusion) Materials: hydrogel, organoids | Bioprinter applies a layer of hydrogel (biopapers) in which tissue spheroids (bioink) are accommodated. The procedure is repeated as programmed to form layers, which may differ from each other, until the final layer is printed. This procedure allows creating a construct with a complex structure | |
| 20 | JEMMA REDMOND | Ourobotics Revolution 3D bioprinter | Applications range from Human tissue, Pharmaceuticals, Food, Synthetic Biology, Electronics, Batteries, and even Textiles as the machine can print with just about every gel-like substance including Collagen, Gelatine, Alginates, Chitosan and more. | Technology: syringe based: syringe-based extrusion Materials: bone tissue from PCL, PLA, PGA, PEG, fibrin elastin, collagen, calcium phosphate and hydrogel | Actually, producing functional, replacement tissues and organs. In other words, creating (or extending) life itself. |