Adhesive tissue engineering scaffolds (ATESs) have emerged as an innovative alternative means, replacing sutures and bioglues, to secure the implants onto target tissues. Relying on their intrinsic tissue adhesion characteristics, ATES systems enable minimally invasive delivery of various scaffolds. This study investigates development of the first class of 3D bioprinted ATES constructs using functionalized hydrogel bioinks. Two ATES delivery strategies, in situ printing onto the adherend versus printing and then transferring to the target surface, are tested using two bioprinting methods, embedded versus air printing. Dopamine‐modified methacrylated hyaluronic acid (HAMA‐Dopa) and gelatin methacrylate (GelMA) are used as the main bioink components, enabling fabrication of scaffolds with enhanced adhesion and crosslinking properties. Results demonstrate that dopamine modification improved adhesive properties of the HAMA‐Dopa/GelMA constructs under various loading conditions, while maintaining their structural fidelity, stability, mechanical properties, and biocompatibility. While directly printing onto the adherend yields superior adhesive strength, embedded printing followed by transfer to the target tissue demonstrates greater potential for translational applications. Together, these results demonstrate the potential of bioprinted ATESs as off‐the‐shelf medical devices for diverse biomedical applications.
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Gil, Carmen J. ; Li, Lan ; Hwang, Boeun ; Cadena, Melissa ; Theus, Andrea S. ; Finamore, Tyler A. ; Bauser-Heaton, Holly ; Mahmoudi, Morteza ; Roeder, Ryan K. ; Serpooshan, Vahid ( , Journal of Controlled Release)
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Pham, Anh ; Gil, Carmen J. ; Smith, Sean C. ; Li, Sean ( , Physical Review B)
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Gil, Carmen J. ; Evans, Connor J. ; Li, Lan ; Allphin, Alex J. ; Tomov, Martin L. ; Jin, Linqi ; Vargas, Merlyn ; Hwang, Boeun ; Wang, Jing ; Putaturo, Victor ; et al ( , Advanced Healthcare Materials)
Abstract 3D bioprinting is revolutionizing the fields of personalized and precision medicine by enabling the manufacturing of bioartificial implants that recapitulate the structural and functional characteristics of native tissues. However, the lack of quantitative and noninvasive techniques to longitudinally track the function of implants has hampered clinical applications of bioprinted scaffolds. In this study, multimaterial 3D bioprinting, engineered nanoparticles (NPs), and spectral photon‐counting computed tomography (PCCT) technologies are integrated for the aim of developing a new precision medicine approach to custom‐engineer scaffolds with traceability. Multiple CT‐visible hydrogel‐based bioinks, containing distinct molecular (iodine and gadolinium) and NP (iodine‐loaded liposome, gold, methacrylated gold (AuMA), and Gd2O3) contrast agents, are used to bioprint scaffolds with varying geometries at adequate fidelity levels. In vitro release studies, together with printing fidelity, mechanical, and biocompatibility tests identified AuMA and Gd2O3NPs as optimal reagents to track bioprinted constructs. Spectral PCCT imaging of scaffolds in vitro and subcutaneous implants in mice enabled noninvasive material discrimination and contrast agent quantification. Together, these results establish a novel theranostic platform with high precision, tunability, throughput, and reproducibility and open new prospects for a broad range of applications in the field of precision and personalized regenerative medicine.
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Bhattacharjee, Tapomoy ; Gil, Carmen J. ; Marshall, Samantha L. ; Urueña, Juan M. ; O’Bryan, Christopher S. ; Carstens, Matt ; Keselowsky, Benjamin ; Palmer, Glyn D. ; Ghivizzani, Steve ; Gibbs, C. Parker ; et al ( , ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering)