University of Wollongong
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Functional 3D neural mini-tissues from printed gel-based bioink and human neural stem cells

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posted on 2024-11-16, 09:43 authored by Qi Gu, Eva Tomaskovic-CrookEva Tomaskovic-Crook, Rodrigo Lozano, Yu Chen, Robert Kapsa, Qi Zhou, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace, Jeremy CrookJeremy Crook
Direct-write printing of stem cells within biomaterials presents an opportunity to engineer tissue for in vitro modeling and regenerative medicine. Here, a first example of constructing neural tissue by printing human neural stem cells that are differentiated in situ to functional neurons and supporting neuroglia is reported. The supporting biomaterial incorporates a novel clinically relevant polysaccharide-based bioink comprising alginate, carboxymethyl-chitosan, and agarose. The printed bioink rapidly gels by stable cross-linking to form a porous 3D scaffold encapsulating stem cells for in situ expansion and differentiation. Differentiated neurons form synaptic contacts, establish networks, are spontaneously active, show a bicuculline-induced increased calcium response, and are predominantly gamma-aminobutyric acid expressing. The 3D tissues will facilitate investigation of human neural development, function, and disease, and may be adaptable for engineering other 3D tissues from different stem cell types.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science

Australian Research Council

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New dimensions in organic bionics

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Gu, Q., Tomaskovic-Crook, E., Lozano, R., Chen, Y., Kapsa, R. M. I., Zhou, Q., Wallace, G. G. & Crook, J. M. (2016). Functional 3D neural mini-tissues from printed gel-based bioink and human neural stem cells. Advanced Healthcare Materials, 5 (12), 1429-1438.

Journal title

Advanced Healthcare Materials

Volume

5

Issue

12

Pagination

1429-1438

Language

English

RIS ID

106898

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