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Journal ArticleDOI

Three-Dimensional Photopatterning of Hydrogels Containing Living Cells

TLDR
The development of a photopatterning technique that allows localized photoencapsulation of live mammalian cells to control the tissue architecture and the combination of microfabrication approaches with photopolymerizable biomaterials will have implications in tissue engineering, elucidating fundamental structure–function relationships of tissues, and formation of immobilized cell arrays for biotechnological applications.
Abstract
Recent advances in tissue engineering have leveraged progress in both polymer chemistry and cell biology. For example, photopolymerizable biomaterials have been developed that can be used to photoencapsulate cells in peptide-derivatized hydrogel networks. While these materials have been useful in bone, cartilage and vascular tissue engineering, they have limited applicability to more complex tissues that are characterized by precise cell and tissue organization (e.g., liver, kidney). Typically, the tissue shape has been defined solely by the container used for photopolymerization. In this paper, we describe the use of photolithographic techniques to broaden the capability of photopolymerizable PEG-based biomaterials by inclusion of structural features within the cell/hydrogel network. Specifically, we describe the development of a photopatterning technique that allows localized photoencapsulation of live mammalian cells to control the tissue architecture. In this study, we optimized the effect of ultraviolet (UV) exposure and photoinitiator concentration on both photopatterning resolution and cell viability. With regard to photopatterning resolution, we found that increased UV exposure broadens feature size, while photoinitiator concentration had no significant effect on patterning resolution. Cell viability was characterized using HepG2 cells, a human hepatoma cell line. We observed that UV exposure itself did not cause cell death over the doses and time scale studied, while the photoinitiator 2,2-dimethoxy-2-phenyl-acetophenone was itself cytotoxic in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, the combination of UV and photoinitiator was the least biocompatible condition presumably due to formation of toxic free radicals. The utility of this method was demonstrated by photopatterning hydrogels containing live cells in various single layer structures, patterns of multiple cellular domains in a single “hybrid” hydrogel layer, and patterns of multiple cell types in multiple layers simulating use in a tissue engineering application. The combination of microfabrication approaches with photopolymerizable biomaterials will have implications in tissue engineering, elucidating fundamental structure–function relationships of tissues, and formation of immobilized cell arrays for biotechnological applications.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrogels in Biology and Medicine: From Molecular Principles to Bionanotechnology†

TL;DR: This work highlights recent developments in engineering uncrosslinked and crosslinked hydrophilic polymers for biomedical and biological applications and shows how such systems' intelligent behavior can be used in sensors, microarrays, and imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrogels in regenerative medicine

TL;DR: The properties of hydrogels that are important for tissue engineering applications and the inherent material design constraints and challenges are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polymeric scaffolds in tissue engineering application: a review

TL;DR: An overview of the different types of scaffolds with their material properties is discussed and the fabrication technologies for tissue engineering scaffolds, including the basic and conventional techniques to the more recent ones, are tabulated.
Journal ArticleDOI

BIOMATERIALS: Where We Have Been and Where We Are Going

TL;DR: This new generation of biomaterials includes surface modification of materials to overcome nonspecific protein adsorption in vivo, precision immobilization of signaling groups on surfaces, and design of sophisticated three-dimensional architectures to produce well-defined patterns for diagnostics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell Encapsulation in Biodegradable Hydrogels for Tissue Engineering Applications

TL;DR: Important considerations for designing biodegradable hydrogels for cell encapsulation are described and recent advances in material design and their applications in tissue engineering are highlighted.
References
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Journal Article

Tissue engineering : Frontiers in biotechnology

R. Langer, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1993 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrogels in pharmaceutical formulations.

TL;DR: The aim of this article is to present a concise review on the applications of hydrogels in the pharmaceutical field, hydrogel characterization and analysis of drug release from such devices.
Book

Fundamentals of microfabrication

TL;DR: The second edition of the Fundamentals of Microfabrication as discussed by the authors provides an in-depth coverage of the science of miniaturization, its methods, and materials, from the fundamentals of lithography through bonding and packaging to quantum structures and molecular engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional hydrogel structures for autonomous flow control inside microfluidic channels

TL;DR: The fabrication of active hydrogel components inside microchannels via direct photopatterning of a liquid phase greatly simplifies system construction and assembly as the functional components are fabricated in situ, and the stimuli-responsive hydrogels components perform both sensing and actuation functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incorporation of adhesion peptides into nonadhesive hydrogels useful for tissue resurfacing

TL;DR: Photopolymerized crosslinked networks of poly(ethylene glycol; PEG) diacrylate (MW 8000) were derivitized throughout their bulk with Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing peptide sequences to promote spreading of human foreskin fibroblasts over 24 h.
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