3D Bioprinting of Polythiophene Materials for Promoting Stem Cell Proliferation in a Nutritionally Deficient Environment.

2021 
3D printing of stem cells provides a tremendous opportunity to tissue engineering in regenerative medicine. However, developing new bioactive materials to rationally augment stem cell viability is still an enormous challenge owing to the nutritionally deficient environment caused by the limited-penetration distance of nutrition when cells are encapsulated within biomaterials. In this work, a cationic conjugated polythiophene derivative, poly[3-(3'-N,N,N-triethylamino-1'-propyloxy)-4-methyl-2,5-thiophene hydrochloride] (PMNT), is designed and integrated into an anionic gelatin/alginate matrix to develop a new 3D bioprintable conjugated polymer ink Gel/Alg/PMNT, while the electrostatic interaction can assist PMNT to anchor inside ink without severe diffusional loss. In principle, PMNT is confirmed to promote human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell (hMSC) proliferation in a serum-free medium by driving cell cycles and up-regulating gene expression in the pathways of biosynthesis and the metabolism. By employing the 3D bioprinting strategy together with hMSCs, the accelerated healing of full-thickness excisional wounds is further realized through the augmented-stem cell therapeutics utilizing Gel/Alg/PMNT ink, in which hMSC proliferation can be effectively promoted upon inductive stimulation of PMNT. The inherent highly bioactive and robust proliferation-promoted nature of the developed conjugated polymer ink Gel/Alg/PMNT significantly overcomes the nutritionally deficient environment, especially in 3D-printed large-scale architectures. The bioactive polythiophene material exhibits a unique capacity to promote stem cell proliferation without the need of serum, providing a new bioink for 3D bioprinting in tissue reconstructions.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    60
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []