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Cell-by-Cell Construction of Living Tissue

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2011

Bradley R. Ringeisen
Affiliation:
Alberto Pique, Douglas Chrisey 4555 Overlook Ave. SW, Naval Research Laboratory, Codes 6372 and 6115, Washington, DC 20375
Heungsoo Kim
Affiliation:
Alberto Pique, Douglas Chrisey 4555 Overlook Ave. SW, Naval Research Laboratory, Codes 6372 and 6115, Washington, DC 20375
H. Daniel Young
Affiliation:
Alberto Pique, Douglas Chrisey 4555 Overlook Ave. SW, Naval Research Laboratory, Codes 6372 and 6115, Washington, DC 20375
Barry J. Spargo
Affiliation:
Alberto Pique, Douglas Chrisey 4555 Overlook Ave. SW, Naval Research Laboratory, Codes 6372 and 6115, Washington, DC 20375
R.C.Y. Auyeung
Affiliation:
Alberto Pique, Douglas Chrisey 4555 Overlook Ave. SW, Naval Research Laboratory, Codes 6372 and 6115, Washington, DC 20375
Peter K. Wu
Affiliation:
Southern Oregon University, Ashland, WA
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Abstract

This paper outlines investigations into a potentially revolutionary approach to tissue engineering. Tissue is a complex three-dimensional structure that contains many different biomaterials such as cells, proteins, and extracellular matrix molecules that are ordered in a very precise way to serve specific functions. In order to replicate such complex structure, it is necessary to have a tool that could deposit all these materials in an accurate and controlled fashion. Most methods to fabricate living three-dimensional structures involve techniques to engineer biocompatible and biodegradable scaffolding, which is then seeded with living cells to form tissue. This scaffolding gives the tissue needed support, but the resulting tissue inherently has no microscopic cellular structure because cells are injected into the scaffolding where they adhere at random. We have developed a novel technique that actually engineers tissue, not scaffolding, that includes the mesoscopic cellular structure inherent in natural tissues. This approach uses a laser-based rapid prototyping system known as matrix assisted pulsed laser evaporation direct write (MAPLE DW) to construct living tissue cell-by-cell. This manuscript details our efforts to rapidly and reproducibly fabricate complex 2D and 3D tissue structures with MAPLE-DW by placing different cells and biomaterials accurately and adherently on the mesoscopic scale

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2002

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References

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