TY - JOUR
T1 - 3D Bioprinting of Neurovascular Tissue Modeling with Collagen-Based Low-Viscosity Composites
AU - Wang, Sen
AU - Bai, Luge
AU - Hu, Xiaoxuan
AU - Yao, Siqi
AU - Hao, Zhiyan
AU - Zhou, Jia Jia
AU - Li, Xiao
AU - Lu, Haixia
AU - He, Jiankang
AU - Wang, Ling
AU - Li, Dichen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Healthcare Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2023/10/6
Y1 - 2023/10/6
N2 - In vitro neurovascular unit (NVU) models are valuable for investigating brain functions and developing drugs. However, it remains challenging to recapitulate the native architectural features and ultra-soft extracellular matrix (ECM) properties of the natural NVU. Cell-laden bioprinting is promising to prepare complex living tissues, but hard to balance the fidelity and cell growth. This study proposes a novel two-stage methodology for biomanufacturing functional 3D neurovascular constructs in vitro with low modulus of ECM. At the shaping stage, a low-viscosity alginate/collagen is printed through an embedded approach; at the culturing stage, the alginate is removed through targeted lysing. The low-viscosity and rapid crosslinking properties provide a printing resolution of ≈10 µm, and the lysis processing can decrease the hydrogels’ modulus to ≈1 kPa and adjust the porosity of the microstructure, providing cells with an environment closing to the brain ECM. A 3D hollow coaxial neurovascular model is fabricated, in which the endothelial cells has expressed tight junction proteins and shown selective permeability, and the astrocytes outside of the endothelial layer are found to spread out with branches and directly interact with endothelial cells. The present study offers a promising modeling method for better understanding the NVU function and screening neuro-drugs.
AB - In vitro neurovascular unit (NVU) models are valuable for investigating brain functions and developing drugs. However, it remains challenging to recapitulate the native architectural features and ultra-soft extracellular matrix (ECM) properties of the natural NVU. Cell-laden bioprinting is promising to prepare complex living tissues, but hard to balance the fidelity and cell growth. This study proposes a novel two-stage methodology for biomanufacturing functional 3D neurovascular constructs in vitro with low modulus of ECM. At the shaping stage, a low-viscosity alginate/collagen is printed through an embedded approach; at the culturing stage, the alginate is removed through targeted lysing. The low-viscosity and rapid crosslinking properties provide a printing resolution of ≈10 µm, and the lysis processing can decrease the hydrogels’ modulus to ≈1 kPa and adjust the porosity of the microstructure, providing cells with an environment closing to the brain ECM. A 3D hollow coaxial neurovascular model is fabricated, in which the endothelial cells has expressed tight junction proteins and shown selective permeability, and the astrocytes outside of the endothelial layer are found to spread out with branches and directly interact with endothelial cells. The present study offers a promising modeling method for better understanding the NVU function and screening neuro-drugs.
KW - 3D bioprinting
KW - embedded printing
KW - extracellular matrix
KW - in vitro neural tissue
KW - vascular-like structures
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85161639860
U2 - 10.1002/adhm.202300004
DO - 10.1002/adhm.202300004
M3 - 文章
C2 - 37264745
AN - SCOPUS:85161639860
SN - 2192-2640
VL - 12
JO - Advanced Healthcare Materials
JF - Advanced Healthcare Materials
IS - 25
M1 - 2300004
ER -