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Creators/Authors contains: "Gartner, Zev J"

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  1. Three-dimensional (3D) printing can be beneficial to tissue engineers and the regenerative medicine community because of its potential to rapidly build elaborate 3D structures from cellular and material inks. However, predicting changes to the structure and pattern of printed tissues arising from the mechanical activity of constituent cells is technically and conceptually challenging. This perspective is targeted to scientists and engineers interested in 3D bioprinting, but from the point of view of cells and tissues as mechanically active living materials. The dynamic forces generated by cells present unique challenges compared to conventional manufacturing modalities but also offer profound opportunities through their capacity to self-organize. Consideration of self-organization following 3D printing takes the design and execution of bioprinting into the fourth dimension of cellular activity. We therefore propose a framework for dynamic bioprinting that spatiotemporally guides the underlying biology through reconfigurable material interfaces controlled by 3D printers. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2026