An Adhesive Bioink towards Biofabrication Under Wet Conditions

3D bioprinting has been driving significant innovations in biomedicine over recent years. Under certain scenarios such as in intraoperative bioprinting, the bioinks used should exhibit not only cyto/biocompatibility but also adhesiveness in wet conditions. Herein, an adhesive bioink composed of gela...

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Veröffentlicht in:Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) Germany), 2023-01, Vol.19 (50), p.e2205078-e2205078
Hauptverfasser: Li, Wanlu, Wang, Mian, Wang, Shiwei, Wang, Xiaoping, Avila, Alan, Kuang, Xiao, Mu, Xuan, Garciamendez, Carlos Ezio, Jiang, Zewei, Manríquez, Jennifer, Tang, Guosheng, Guo, Jie, Mille, Luis Santiago, Robledo, Juan Antonio, Wang, Di, Cheng, Feng, Li, Hongbin, Flores, Regina Sanchez, Zhao, Zhibo, Delavaux, Clément, Wang, Zixuan, López, Arturo, Yi, Sili, Zhou, Cuiping, Gómez, Ameyalli, Schuurmans, Carl, Yang, Guo-Yuan, Wang, Yongting, Zhang, Xingcai, Zhang, Ximu, Zhang, Yu Shrike
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:3D bioprinting has been driving significant innovations in biomedicine over recent years. Under certain scenarios such as in intraoperative bioprinting, the bioinks used should exhibit not only cyto/biocompatibility but also adhesiveness in wet conditions. Herein, an adhesive bioink composed of gelatin methacryloyl, gelatin, methacrylated hyaluronic acid, and skin secretion of Andrias davidianus is designed. The bioink exhibits favorable cohesion to allow faithful extrusion bioprinting in wet conditions, while simultaneously showing good adhesion to a variety of surfaces of different chemical properties, possibly achieved through the diverse bonds presented in the bioink formulation. As such, we are able to fabricate sophisticated planar and volumetric constructs using extrusion bioprinting, where the dexterity is further enhanced using ergonomic handheld bioprinters to realize in situ bioprinting. In vitro experiments reveal that cells maintain high viability; further in vivo studies demonstrate good integration and immediate liver injury sealing. The characteristics of our bioink indicate its potential widespread utility in extrusion bioprinting and will likely broaden the applications of bioprinting towards situations such as in situ dressing and minimally invasive tissue regeneration.
ISSN:1613-6810
1613-6829
DOI:10.1002/smll.202205078