Corneal bioprinting using a high concentration pure collagen I transparent bioink
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 16:51authored byYihui Song, Sheng Hua, Sepidar Sayyar, Zhi Chen, Johnson Chung, Xiao Liu, Zhilian Yue, Cameron Angus, Benjamin Filippi, Stephen Beirne, Gordon Wallace, Gerard Sutton, Jingjing You
The use of 3D printing to produce a bioengineered cornea is emerging as an approach to help alleviate the global shortage of donor corneas. Collagen Type 1 (Col-1) is the most abundant collagen in the human cornea. However, Col-I presents challenges as a bioink. It can self-assemble at neutral pH, making phase transitions as required for 3D printing difficult to control. Furthermore, low concentration solutions required for the transparency of printed Col-I lead to weak mechanical properties in its printed structures. In this study, Col-I at high concentrations, was tested with 15 different solutions to identify the composition preventing Col-I self-assembly. A stable Col-I bioink was then developed using riboflavin as a photoinitiator and UV irradiation-induced crosslinking. The mechanical properties and transparency, of the structures produced, were evaluated. The optimised Col-I bioink with corneal stromal cells was tested using a spiral printing method. The printed structure was transparent, and the encapsulated corneal stromal cells had over 90% viability after three weeks of culturing.