Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures
Abstract Tissue architecture is a prerequisite for its biological functions. Recapitulating the three‐dimensional (3D) tissue structure represents one of the biggest challenges in tissue engineering. Two‐dimensional (2D) tissue fabrication methods are currently in the main stage for tissue engineeri...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202101027 |
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doaj-662c6241b64e4218b5d6ee5c02fc4f9d2021-09-08T19:43:50ZengWileyAdvanced Science2198-38442021-09-01817n/an/a10.1002/advs.202101027Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden MicrostructuresZhaowei Chen0Nanditha Anandakrishnan1Ying Xu2Ruogang Zhao3Department of Biomedical Engineering State University of New York at Buffalo Buffalo NY 14260 USADepartment of Biomedical Engineering State University of New York at Buffalo Buffalo NY 14260 USADepartment of Biomedical Engineering State University of New York at Buffalo Buffalo NY 14260 USADepartment of Biomedical Engineering State University of New York at Buffalo Buffalo NY 14260 USAAbstract Tissue architecture is a prerequisite for its biological functions. Recapitulating the three‐dimensional (3D) tissue structure represents one of the biggest challenges in tissue engineering. Two‐dimensional (2D) tissue fabrication methods are currently in the main stage for tissue engineering and disease modeling. However, due to their planar nature, the created models only represent very limited out‐of‐plane tissue structure. Here compressive buckling principle is harnessed to create 3D biomimetic cell‐laden microstructures from microfabricated planar patterns. This method allows out‐of‐plane delivery of cells and extracellular matrix patterns with high spatial precision. As a proof of principle, a variety of polymeric 3D miniature structures including a box, an octopus, a pyramid, and continuous waves are fabricated. A mineralized bone tissue model with spatially distributed cell‐laden lacunae structures is fabricated to demonstrate the fabrication power of the method. It is expected that this novel approach will help to significantly expand the utility of the established 2D fabrication techniques for 3D tissue fabrication. Given the widespread of 2D fabrication methods in biomedical research and the high demand for biomimetic 3D structures, this method is expected to bridge the gap between 2D and 3D tissue fabrication and open up new possibilities in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202101027cell‐laden microstructurescompressive bucklingengineered tissuepolymeric biomaterialstoughness |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Zhaowei Chen Nanditha Anandakrishnan Ying Xu Ruogang Zhao |
spellingShingle |
Zhaowei Chen Nanditha Anandakrishnan Ying Xu Ruogang Zhao Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures Advanced Science cell‐laden microstructures compressive buckling engineered tissue polymeric biomaterials toughness |
author_facet |
Zhaowei Chen Nanditha Anandakrishnan Ying Xu Ruogang Zhao |
author_sort |
Zhaowei Chen |
title |
Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures |
title_short |
Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures |
title_full |
Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures |
title_fullStr |
Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures |
title_full_unstemmed |
Compressive Buckling Fabrication of 3D Cell‐Laden Microstructures |
title_sort |
compressive buckling fabrication of 3d cell‐laden microstructures |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Advanced Science |
issn |
2198-3844 |
publishDate |
2021-09-01 |
description |
Abstract Tissue architecture is a prerequisite for its biological functions. Recapitulating the three‐dimensional (3D) tissue structure represents one of the biggest challenges in tissue engineering. Two‐dimensional (2D) tissue fabrication methods are currently in the main stage for tissue engineering and disease modeling. However, due to their planar nature, the created models only represent very limited out‐of‐plane tissue structure. Here compressive buckling principle is harnessed to create 3D biomimetic cell‐laden microstructures from microfabricated planar patterns. This method allows out‐of‐plane delivery of cells and extracellular matrix patterns with high spatial precision. As a proof of principle, a variety of polymeric 3D miniature structures including a box, an octopus, a pyramid, and continuous waves are fabricated. A mineralized bone tissue model with spatially distributed cell‐laden lacunae structures is fabricated to demonstrate the fabrication power of the method. It is expected that this novel approach will help to significantly expand the utility of the established 2D fabrication techniques for 3D tissue fabrication. Given the widespread of 2D fabrication methods in biomedical research and the high demand for biomimetic 3D structures, this method is expected to bridge the gap between 2D and 3D tissue fabrication and open up new possibilities in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. |
topic |
cell‐laden microstructures compressive buckling engineered tissue polymeric biomaterials toughness |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202101027 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT zhaoweichen compressivebucklingfabricationof3dcellladenmicrostructures AT nandithaanandakrishnan compressivebucklingfabricationof3dcellladenmicrostructures AT yingxu compressivebucklingfabricationof3dcellladenmicrostructures AT ruogangzhao compressivebucklingfabricationof3dcellladenmicrostructures |
_version_ |
1717761940103626752 |