Title of article :
Using Sacrificial Cell Spheroids for the Bioprinting of Perfusable 3D Tissue and Organ Constructs: A Computational Study
Author/Authors :
Robu, Andreea Department of Automation and Applied Informatics - Politehnica University of Timisoara - Timisoara, Romania , Mironov, Vladimir 3D Bioprinting Solutions - Moscow, Russia , Neagu, Adrian Department of Physics & Astronomy - University of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Abstract :
A long-standing problem in tissue engineering is the biofabrication of perfusable tissue constructs that can be readily connected to
the patient’s vasculature. It was partially solved by three-dimensional (3D) printing of sacrificial material (e.g., hydrogel) strands:
upon incorporation in another cell-laden hydrogel, the strands were removed, leaving behind perfusable channels. Their
complexity, however, did not match that of the native vasculature. Here, we propose to use multicellular spheroids as a sacrificial
material and investigate their potential benefits in the context of 3D bioprinting of cell aggregates and/or cell-laden hydrogels. Our
study is based on computer simulations of postprinting cellular rearrangements. The computational model of the biological
system is built on a cubic lattice, whereas its evolution is simulated using the Metropolis Monte Carlo algorithm. The simulations
describe structural changes in three types of tissue constructs: a tube made of a single cell type, a tube made of two cell types, and a
cell-laden hydrogel slab that incorporates a branching tube. In all three constructs, the lumen is obtained after the elimination of
the sacrificial cell population. Our study suggests that sacrificial cell spheroids (sacrospheres) enable one to print tissue constructs
outfitted with a finer and more complex network of channels than the ones obtained so far. Moreover, cellular interactions might
give rise to a tissue microarchitecture that lies beyond the bioprinter’s resolution. Although more expensive than inert materials,
sacrificial cells have the potential to bring further progress towards the biofabrication of fully vascularized tissue substitutes.
Keywords :
3D , Computational , Tissue
Journal title :
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine