Fibroblasts Accelerate Formation and Improve Reproducibility of 3D Cellular Structures Printed with Magnetic Assistance

Author:

Mishriki Sarah1,Aithal Srivatsa2,Gupta Tamaghna1,Sahu Rakesh P.23ORCID,Geng Fei24,Puri Ishwar K.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

4. Walter Booth School of Engineering Practice and Technology, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Fibroblasts (mouse, NIH/3T3) are combined with MDA-MB-231 cells to accelerate the formation and improve the reproducibility of 3D cellular structures printed with magnetic assistance. Fibroblasts and MDA-MB-231 cells are cocultured to produce 12.5 : 87.5, 25 : 75, and 50 : 50 total population mixtures. These mixtures are suspended in a cell medium containing a paramagnetic salt, Gd-DTPA, which increases the magnetic susceptibility of the medium with respect to the cells. A 3D monotypic MDA-MB-231 cellular structure is printed within 24 hours with magnetic assistance, whereas it takes 48 hours to form a similar structure through gravitational settling alone. The maximum projected areas and circularities, and cellular ATP levels of the printed structures are measured for 336 hours. Increasing the relative amounts of the fibroblasts mixed with the MDA-MB-231 cells decreases the time taken to form the structures and improves their reproducibility. Structures produced through gravitational settling have larger maximum projected areas and cellular ATP, but are deemed less reproducible. The distribution of individual cell lines in the cocultured 3D cellular structures shows that printing with magnetic assistance yields 3D cellular structures that resemble in vivo tumors more closely than those formed through gravitational settling. The results validate our hypothesis that (1) fibroblasts act as a “glue” that supports the formation of 3D cellular structures, and (2) the structures are produced more rapidly and with greater reproducibility with magnetically assisted printing than through gravitational settling alone. Printing of 3D cellular structures with magnetic assistance has applications relevant to drug discovery, lab-on-chip devices, and tissue engineering.

Funder

Ontario Research Fund Research Infrastructure

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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