生物膜
体外
微生物学
3D生物打印
生物
细胞毒性
细菌
组织工程
生物化学
遗传学
作者
Samy Aliyazdi,Sarah Frisch,Alberto Hidalgo,Nicolas Frank,Daniel Krug,Rolf Müller,Ulrich F. Schaefer,Thomas Vogt,Brigitta Loretz,Claus‐Michael Lehr
出处
期刊:Biofabrication
[IOP Publishing]
日期:2023-06-06
卷期号:15 (3): 035019-035019
被引量:5
标识
DOI:10.1088/1758-5090/acd95e
摘要
Biofilm-associated infections are causing over half a million deaths each year, raising the requirement for innovative therapeutic approaches. For developing novel therapeutics against bacterial biofilm infections, complexin vitromodels that allow to study drug effects on both pathogens and host cells as well as their interaction under controlled, physiologically relevant conditions appear as highly desirable. Nonetheless, building such models is quite challenging because (1) rapid bacterial growth and release of virulence factors may lead to premature host cell death and (2) maintaining the biofilm status under suitable co-culture requires a highly controlled environment. To approach that problem, we chose 3D bioprinting. However, printing living bacterial biofilms in defined shapes on human cell models, requires bioinks with very specific properties. Hence, this work aims to develop a 3D bioprinting biofilm method to build robustin vitroinfection models. Based on rheology, printability and bacterial growth, a bioink containing 3% gelatin and 1% alginate in Luria-Bertani-medium was found optimal forEscherichia coliMG1655 biofilms. Biofilm properties were maintained after printing, as shown visually via microscopy techniques as well as in antibiotic susceptibility assays. Metabolic profile analysis of bioprinted biofilms showed high similarity to native biofilms. After printing on human bronchial epithelial cells (Calu-3), the shape of printed biofilms was maintained even after dissolution of non-crosslinked bioink, while no cytotoxicity was observed over 24 h. Therefore, the approach presented here may provide a platform for building complexin vitroinfection models comprising bacterial biofilms and human host cells.
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