Extended perfused culture of cm-scale endocrine pancreatic tissues created through sacrificial embedded printing into alginate

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Abstract

Pluripotent stem cells represent a potentially unlimited cell source for the fabrication of human bioartificial tissues to study and treat degenerative conditions such as type 1 diabetes. Alginate is widely used for mammalian cell immobilization and the primary hydrogel studied for pancreatic islet encapsulation. Rheological properties of alginate solutions or fully gelled forms are unsuitable as support matrix for embedded 3D printing. We describe partially gelled self-healing alginate formulations tuned for embedded 3D printing. Perfusable multi-plane hierarchical networks branching into 10 parallel channels, obtained by 3D printing of Pluronic F127 into the alginate support, show high fidelity to computer-assisted models. Therapeutic β-cell doses (40×10 6 cells/mL) within centimeter-thick perfusable constructs remained viable for at least 1 week of culture under flow, with rapid insulin secretion detected upon glucose challenges. Stem cell-derived islet clusters cultured in 5-channel contructs for 25 days differentiated towards functional insulin-expressing cells. We describe a novel approach to generate cm-scale perfusable endocrine pancreatic constructs using sacrificial embedded 3D printing into alginate. This approach offers an adaptable platform to engineer perfusable cm-scale functional endocrine pancreatic tissues and potentially other vascularized bioartificial tissues.

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