Bioprinting of Stable Bionic Interfaces Using Piezoresistive Hydrogel Organoelectronics

Author:

Georgopoulou Antonia1ORCID,Filippi Miriam2,Stefani Lisa23,Drescher Felix2,Balciunaite Aiste2,Scherberich Arnaud3,Katzschmann Robert2,Clemens Frank1

Affiliation:

1. High Performance Ceramics Laboratory Empa Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Science and Technology Dübendorf 8600 Switzerland

2. Soft Robotics Laboratory Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering ETH Zurich Zurich 8092 Switzerland

3. Department of Biomedicine University Hospital Basel University of Basel Basel 4031 Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBionic tissues offer an exciting frontier in biomedical research by integrating biological cells with artificial electronics, such as sensors. One critical hurdle is the development of artificial electronics that can mechanically harmonize with biological tissues, ensuring a robust interface for effective strain transfer and local deformation sensing. In this study, a highly tissue‐integrative, soft mechanical sensor fabricated from a composite piezoresistive hydrogel. The composite not only exhibits exceptional mechanical properties, with elongation at the point of fracture reaching up to 680%, but also maintains excellent biocompatibility across multiple cell types. Furthermore, the material exhibits bioadhesive qualities, facilitating stable cell adhesion to its surface. A unique advantage of the formulation is the compatibility with 3D bioprinting, an essential technique for fabricating stable interfaces. A multimaterial sensorized 3D bionic construct is successfully bioprinted, and it is compared to structures produced via hydrogel casting. In contrast to cast constructs, the bioprinted ones display a high (87%) cell viability, preserve differentiation ability, and structural integrity of the sensor–tissue interface throughout the tissue development duration of 10 d. With easy fabrication and effective soft tissue integration, this composite holds significant promise for various biomedical applications, including implantable electronics and organ‐on‐a‐chip technologies.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

Wiley

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