生物相容性材料
纳米技术
材料科学
制作
生物医学工程
计算机科学
工程类
医学
病理
替代医学
作者
Johan Lind,Travis A. Busbee,Alexander D. Valentine,Francesco S. Pasqualini,Hongyan Yuan,Moran Yadid,Sungjin Park,Arda Kotikian,Alexander P. Nesmith,Patrick Campbell,Joost J. Vlassak,Jennifer A. Lewis,Kevin Kit Parker
出处
期刊:Nature Materials
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2016-10-24
卷期号:16 (3): 303-308
被引量:759
摘要
Heart-on-a-chip devices with integrated strain gauges for direct readout of tissue contractile strength allow for multiplexed drug-dose experiments and studies of functional maturation of cardiac tissue. Biomedical research has relied on animal studies and conventional cell cultures for decades. Recently, microphysiological systems (MPS), also known as organs-on-chips, that recapitulate the structure and function of native tissues in vitro, have emerged as a promising alternative1. However, current MPS typically lack integrated sensors and their fabrication requires multi-step lithographic processes2. Here, we introduce a facile route for fabricating a new class of instrumented cardiac microphysiological devices via multimaterial three-dimensional (3D) printing. Specifically, we designed six functional inks, based on piezo-resistive, high-conductance, and biocompatible soft materials that enable integration of soft strain gauge sensors within micro-architectures that guide the self-assembly of physio-mimetic laminar cardiac tissues. We validated that these embedded sensors provide non-invasive, electronic readouts of tissue contractile stresses inside cell incubator environments. We further applied these devices to study drug responses, as well as the contractile development of human stem cell-derived laminar cardiac tissues over four weeks.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI