Integrating melt electrowriting and inkjet bioprinting for engineering structurally organized articular cartilage
Citation:
Dufour A, Gallostra XB, O'Keeffe C, Eichholz K, Von Euw S, Garcia O, Kelly DJ. Integrating melt electrowriting and inkjet bioprinting for engineering structurally organized articular cartilage. Biomaterials. 2022 Feb 17;283:121405Download Item:

Abstract:
Successful cartilage engineering requires the generation of biological grafts mimicking the structure, composition
and mechanical behaviour of the native tissue. Here melt electrowriting (MEW) was used to produce arrays of
polymeric structures whose function was to orient the growth of cellular aggregates spontaneously generated
within these structures, and to provide tensile reinforcement to the resulting tissues. Inkjet printing was used to
deposit defined numbers of cells into MEW structures, which self-assembled into an organized array of spheroids
within hours, ultimately generating a hybrid tissue that was hyaline-like in composition. Structurally, the
engineered cartilage mimicked the histotypical organization observed in skeletally immature synovial joints.
This biofabrication framework was then used to generate scaled-up (50 mm × 50 mm) cartilage implants con-
taining over 3,500 cellular aggregates in under 15 min. After 8 weeks in culture, a 50-fold increase in the
compressive stiffness of these MEW reinforced tissues were observed, while the tensile properties were still
dominated by the polymer network, resulting in a composite construct demonstrating tension-compression
nonlinearity mimetic of the native tissue. Helium ion microscopy further demonstrated the development of an
arcading collagen network within the engineered tissue. This hybrid bioprinting strategy provides a versatile and
scalable approach to engineer cartilage biomimetic grafts for biological joint resurfacing.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
12/RC/2278
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
17/SP/ 4721
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/kellyd9
Author: Kelly, Daniel
Type of material:
Journal ArticleSeries/Report no:
Biomaterials;283;
121405;
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
cartilage engineering, hyaline-like in composition, melt electrowriting (MEW), 3D bioprinting, Inkjet printing, Self-assembly, Spheroid, Stratified cartilageDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121405Licences: