Abstract
Engineering 3D tissue-like constructs for applications such as regenerative medicine remains a major challenge in biomedical research. Recently, self-healing, viscoplastic fluids have been introduced as suspension media to allow lower viscosity, water-rich bioinks to be printed within them for the fabrication of more biomimetic structures. Here, we present gellan gum granular gels produced through the application of shear during gelation, as a candidate suspension medium. We demonstrate that these granular gels exhibit viscoplasticity over a wide range of temperatures, permitting their use for 3D bioprinting of filaments and droplets at low (4°C) as well as physiological temperatures. These granular gels exhibit very low yield stresses (down to 0.4 Pa) which facilitated printing at print speeds up to 60 mm.s-1. Furthermore, we demonstrate the printing of cell-laden droplets maintained over 7 days to show the potential for multiple days of cell culture, as well as the fabrication of hydrogel features within a crosslinkable version of the suspension medium containing granular gellan gum and gelatine-methacryloyl. The combination of ease of preparation, high printing speed, wide temperature tolerance, and crosslinkability makes this gellan gum sheared through cooling-induced gelation an attractive candidate for suspended biofabrication.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e0312726 |
Journal | PLoS ONE |
Volume | 19 |
Issue number | 11 |
Early online date | 27 Nov 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 27 Nov 2024 |
Keywords
- Animals
- Bioprinting - methods
- Gels - chemistry
- Humans
- Hydrogels - chemistry
- Polysaccharides, Bacterial - chemistry
- Printing, Three-Dimensional
- Suspensions
- Temperature
- Tissue Engineering - methods
- Tissue Scaffolds - chemistry
- Viscosity