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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

3D printable hyaluronic acid-based hydrogel for its potential application as a bioink in tissue engineering

TLDR
This study showed HA-g-pHEA-Gelatin gel’s potential as a bioink or its tissue engineering applications in injectable and 3D bioprinting forms and demonstrated both stable rheology properties and excellent biocompatibility.
Abstract
After recognition of 3D printing and injectable hydrogel as a critical issue in tissue/organ engineering and regenerative medicine society, many hydrogels as bioinks have been developed worldwide by using polymeric biomaterials such as gelatin, alginate, hyaluronic acid and others. Even though some gels have shown good performances in 3D bioprinting, still their performances do not meet the requirements enough to be used as a bioink in tissue engineering. In this study, a hydrogel consisting of three biocompatible biomaterials such as hyaluronic acid (HA), hydroxyethyl acrylate (HEA) and gelatin-methacryloyl, i.e. HA-g-pHEA-gelatin gel, has been evaluated for its possibility as a bioprinting gel, a bioink. Hydrogel synthesis was obtained by graft polymerization of HEA to HA and then grafting of gelatin- methacryloyl via radical polymerization mechanism. Physical and biological properties of the HA-based hydrogels fabricated with different concentrations of methacrylic anhydride (6 and 8%) for gelatin-methacryloylation have been evaluated such as swelling, rheology, morphology, cell compatibility, and delivery of small molecular dimethyloxalylglycine. Printings of HA-g-pHEA-Gelatin gel and its bioink with bone cell loaded in lattice forms were also evaluated by using home-built multi-material (3D bio-) printing system. The experimental results demonstrated that the HA-g-pHEA-gelatin hydrogel showed both stable rheology properties and excellent biocompatibility, and the gel showed printability in good shape. The bone cells in bioinks of the lattice-printed scaffolds were viable. This study showed HA-g-pHEA-Gelatin gel’s potential as a bioink or its tissue engineering applications in injectable and 3D bioprinting forms.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Printability and Shape Fidelity of Bioinks in 3D Bioprinting.

TL;DR: The physicochemical parameters influencing shape fidelity are discussed, together with their importance in establishing new models, predictive tools and printing methods that are deemed instrumental for the design of next-generation bioinks, and for reproducible comparison of their structural performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photopolymerizable Biomaterials and Light-Based 3D Printing Strategies for Biomedical Applications.

TL;DR: The development of biomaterials suited for light-based 3D printing modalities with an emphasis on bioprinting applications are reviewed and the chemical mechanisms that govern photopolymerization are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in 3D Printing Processes for Biomedical Field: Opportunities and Challenges

TL;DR: A basic understanding of the fundamentals of 3D/4D printing along with bioprinting processes is provided and a glimpse into the future possibilities and benefits provided by machine learning in the additive manufacturing field is emphasized.
Journal ArticleDOI

3D bioprinting of mechanically tuned bioinks derived from cardiac decellularized extracellular matrix.

TL;DR: Hydrogel bioinks derived from decellularized extracellular matrix combine extrudability, shape fidelity, rapid cross-linking, and cytocompatibility in a single formulation, highlighting the potential for applications in modeling both healthy and fibrotic cardiac tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyaluronic Acid as a Bioink for Extrusion-Based 3D Printing

TL;DR: The available literature is presented based on subjects including: rheological properties in connection with printability, the chemical strategies for endowing HA the desired properties, the clinical application investigated, the most advanced preclinical studies, advantages and limitations in comparison with similar biopolymer-based (bio)inks and future perspectives.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

3D bioprinting of tissues and organs

TL;DR: 3D bioprinting is being applied to regenerative medicine to address the need for tissues and organs suitable for transplantation and developing high-throughput 3D-bioprinted tissue models for research, drug discovery and toxicology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organ printing: computer-aided jet-based 3D tissue engineering

TL;DR: Combination of an engineering approach with the developmental biology concept of embryonic tissue fluidity enables the creation of a new rapid prototyping 3D organ printing technology, which will dramatically accelerate and optimize tissue and organ assembly.
Journal ArticleDOI

The bioink: A comprehensive review on bioprintable materials.

TL;DR: This paper presents the first comprehensive review of existing bioink types including hydrogels, cell aggregates, microcarriers and decellularized matrix components used in extrusion-, droplet- and laser-based bioprinting processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct 3D bioprinting of perfusable vascular constructs using a blend bioink

TL;DR: A versatile 3D bioprinting strategy that employs biomimetic biomaterials and an advanced extrusion system to deposit perfusable vascular structures with highly ordered arrangements in a single-step process, superior to conventional microfabrication or sacrificial templating approaches for fabrication of the perfusable vasculature.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive review on droplet-based bioprinting: Past, present and future.

TL;DR: A first-time review of DBB is presented and comprehensively covers the existing DBB modalities including inkjet, electrohydrodynamic, acoustic, and micro-valve bioprinting.
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