3D Printing of Extracellular Matrix-Based Multicomponent, All-Natural, Highly Elastic, and Functional Materials toward Vascular Tissue Engineering
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAttribution 3.0 United Stateshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/Date
2023Author
Işık, MelisKarakaya, Ece
Arslan, Tugba Sezgin
Atila, Deniz
Erdoğan, Yaşar Kemal
Arslan, Yavuz Emre
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Işık, M., Karakaya, E., Arslan, T. S., Atila, D., Erdoğan, Y. K., Arslan, Y. E., … Derkus, B. (2023). 3D Printing of Extracellular Matrix‐Based Multicomponent, All‐Natural, Highly Elastic, and Functional Materials toward Vascular Tissue Engineering. Advanced Healthcare Materials. https://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202203044Abstract
3D printing offers an exciting opportunity to fabricate biological constructs with specific geometries, clinically relevant sizes, and functions for biomedical applications. However, successful application of 3D printing is limited by the narrow range of printable and bio-instructive materials. Multicomponent hydrogel bioinks present unique opportunities to create bio-instructive materials able to display high structural fidelity and fulfill the mechanical and functional requirements for in situ tissue engineering. Herein, 3D printable and perfusable multicomponent hydrogel constructs with high elasticity, self-recovery properties, excellent hydrodynamic performance, and improved bioactivity are reported. The materials' design strategy integrates fast gelation kinetics of sodium alginate (Alg), in situ crosslinking of tyramine-modified hyaluronic acid (HAT), and temperature-dependent self-assembly and biological functions of decellularized aorta (dAECM). Using extrusion-based printing approach, the capability to print the multicomponent hydrogel bioinks with high precision into a well-defined vascular constructs able to withstand flow and repetitive cyclic compressive loading, is demonstrated. Both in vitro and pre-clinical models are used to show the pro-angiogenic and anti-inflammatory properties of the multicomponent vascular constructs. This study presents a strategy to create new bioink whose functional properties are greater than the sum of their components and with potential applications in vascular tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
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