Author:
Gebeyehu Aragaw,Surapaneni Sunil Kumar,Huang John,Mondal Arindam,Wang Vivian Ziwen,Haruna Nana Fatima,Bagde Arvind,Arthur Peggy,Kutlehria Shallu,Patel Nil,Rishi Arun K.,Singh Mandip
Abstract
AbstractA series of stable and ready-to-use bioinks have been developed based on the xeno-free and tunable hydrogel (VitroGel) system. Cell laden scaffold fabrication with optimized polysaccharide-based inks demonstrated that Ink H4 and RGD modified Ink H4-RGD had excellent rheological properties. Both bioinks were printable with 25–40 kPa extrusion pressure, showed 90% cell viability, shear-thinning and rapid shear recovery properties making them feasible for extrusion bioprinting without UV curing or temperature adjustment. Ink H4-RGD showed printability between 20 and 37 °C and the scaffolds remained stable for 15 days at temperature of 37 °C. 3D printed non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patient derived xenograft cells (PDCs) showed rapid spheroid growth of size around 500 µm in diameter and tumor microenvironment formation within 7 days. IC50 values demonstrated higher resistance of 3D spheroids to docetaxel (DTX), doxorubicin (DOX) and erlotinib compared to 2D monolayers of NSCLC-PDX, wild type triple negative breast cancer (MDA-MB-231 WT) and lung adenocarcinoma (HCC-827) cells. Results of flow property, shape fidelity, scaffold stability and biocompatibility of H4-RGD suggest that this hydrogel could be considered for 3D cell bioprinting and also for in-vitro tumor microenvironment development for high throughput screening of various anti-cancer drugs.
Funder
NSF-CREST center for Complex Material Design and also for Multidimensional Additive processing (CoManD) award
The Research Centers in Minority Institutions (RCMI) program.
Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Review
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
49 articles.
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