Embedded 3D Bioprinting for Engineering Miniaturized In Vitro Tumor Models

Methods Mol Biol. 2024:2764:279-288. doi: 10.1007/978-1-0716-3674-9_18.

Abstract

Embedded extrusion 3D bioprinting is a rapidly emerging additive manufacturing methodology that provides a precise spatial deposition of synthetic or natural-origin low-viscosity bioinks during the extrusion printing process. Such a strategy has to date unlocked the freeform extrusion biofabrication of complex micro-to-macro-scale living architectures for numerous applications, including tissue engineering and in vitro disease modeling. In this chapter, we describe a suspension bioprinting methodology leveraging a continuous viscoelastic biopolymer supporting bath functionalized with divalent calcium cations to enable a rapid processing of user-defined bioinks toward architecturally complex 3D in vitro tumor models. This highly simple and cost-effective viscoelastic supporting bath enables a full freeform biofabrication of cell-laden 3D tumor-mimetic architectures that exhibit structural stability in culture post-printing. The cytocompatibility of the supporting bath, its ease of removal from biofabricated living constructs, and its adaptability for processing different ECM-mimetic bioinks open avenues for multi-scale fabrication of numerous types of physiomimetic 3D tumor models for preclinical screening of candidate therapeutics.

Keywords: Biofabrication; Embedded extrusion bioprinting; In vitro tumor models; Preclinical therapies screening; Supporting bath.

MeSH terms

  • Biomimetics
  • Bioprinting* / methods
  • Humans
  • Hydrogels / chemistry
  • Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Printing, Three-Dimensional
  • Tissue Engineering / methods
  • Tissue Scaffolds / chemistry

Substances

  • Hydrogels