University of Wollongong
Browse

Engineering in vitro human neural tissue analogs by 3D bioprinting and electrostimulation

Download (1.94 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-27, 01:03 authored by Danielle Warren, Eva Tomaskovic-CrookEva Tomaskovic-Crook, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace, Jeremy CrookJeremy Crook
There is a fundamental need for clinically relevant, reproducible, and standardized in vitro human neural tissue models, not least of all to study heterogenic and complex human-specific neurological (such as neuropsychiatric) disorders. Construction of three-dimensional (3D) bioprinted neural tissues from native human-derived stem cells (e.g., neural stem cells) and human pluripotent stem cells (e.g., induced pluripotent) in particular is appreciably impacting research and conceivably clinical translation. Given the ability to artificially and favorably regulate a cell's survival and behavior by manipulating its biophysical environment, careful consideration of the printing technique, supporting biomaterial and specific exogenously delivered stimuli, is both required and advantageous. By doing so, there exists an opportunity, more than ever before, to engineer advanced and precise tissue analogs that closely recapitulate the morphological and functional elements of natural tissues (healthy or diseased). Importantly, the application of electrical stimulation as a method of enhancing printed tissue development in vitro, including neuritogenesis, synaptogenesis, and cellular maturation, has the added advantage of modeling both traditional and new stimulation platforms, toward improved understanding of efficacy and innovative electroceutical development and application.

Funding

The authors wish to acknowledge funding from the Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence Scheme (CE140100012).

History

Journal title

APL Bioengineering

Volume

5

Issue

2

Article/chapter number

ARTN 020901

Total pages

25

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Location

United States

Publication status

  • Published

Language

English

Associated Identifiers

grant.3931460 (dimensions-grant-id)