What’s it about?
In this blog post, I discuss the
possibilities of Bioprinting, also known as 3D printing organs or segments of
tissues. Bioprinting has been deployed to replicate the geometrical shapes of
organs/tissues accurately. With this information, I was curious about the
progress and possibility of researchers/physicians using Bioprinting to replace
damaged organs, or when a matching organ donor is unavailable. I want also to
discuss how bioprinting works, and how it differs from standard 3D printers.
Type of “printing material” used in the printing process, and how these prints
(Organs/tissue segments) come out of the bioprinters.
We’re 3D printing
Organs?!?!
It would be cool and awesome to say
that we can replace missing/damaged organs with completely fabricated organs
that came from stem cells. Unfortunately, significant challenges still face the
possibility of 3D bioprinting organs. These challenges consist of; “Human cell
incorporation into sizable and dense 3D structures exposes them to sub‐optimal
conditions due to diffusion limits” (Kumar 1). Stem cell survival is impacted
by “and function, such as low oxygen supply,
perturbations in pH equilibrium, and constrained access to vital nutrients
within the core of the engineered tissue”.(Kumar 1). There was also the issue
for the longest time of how/what kind of medium would contain these stem cells
for bio-printing, as well as the kind of cells that would be included within
these molds. “As tissues are composed of many cell types and layers, 3D
structures can be biofabricated by casting into molds, or by 3D bioprinting
using multiple printheads to create complex 3D shapes, using various bioinks
(biomaterials).[ 2 ] Likewise, different stem cells can be used to generate multiple
tissue types.[ 3–6 ].”(Kumar 1)
What are
Bio-inks?
Bio-inks are 3D structural models
that can be used in bioprinting. These structures act as a medium that can hold/maintain
planted cells with the structure as the bioprinter shapes the rest of the
structure. seed cells are encapsulated within the bioink and are precisely
deposited in specific spatial locations as the bioprinter shapes the structures” (Yang
L 1). These Bio-inks can be used to represent the tissues that will be
replaced, although some bio-inks show that their sturdiness of structure seems too
tough for cell growth often leading to cell death. On the other hand, “gel-based
materials of lower mechanical strength favor cell survival, the printed
geometrical structures often collapse, losing their ability to replicate the natural
tissue/organ architecture” (Yang L 1). After some research, the researcher found
that embedding cells within the gel medium would often lead to high success in
cell growth and structure stability.
Conclusion
The possibility of artificially making organs
and tissues is getting closer to reality. Although a few complications persist
within the development of bio-printing, research has shown that the possibility
of bio-printing is a possibility and might even be a thing shortly!
References:
Luo,
Y., Xu, R., Hu, Z., Ni, R., Zhu, T., Zhang, H., & Zhu, Y. (2024). Gel-Based
Suspension Medium Used in 3D Bioprinting for Constructing Tissue/Organ
Analogs. Gels (Basel, Switzerland), 10(10), 644. https://doi-org.dml.regis.edu/10.3390/gels10100644
Alok Kumar, Robert A.
Brown, Daniel Benyamien Roufaeil, Aditi Gupta, Erika L. Lipford, Divya
Muthusamy, Amihai Zalzman, Ronna Hertzano, Tao Lowe, Joseph P. Stains, &
Michal Zalzman. (2024). DeepFreeze 3D‐biofabrication for Bioengineering and
Storage of Stem Cells in Thick and Large‐Scale Human Tissue Analogs. Advanced
Science, 11(11). https://doi-org.dml.regis.edu/10.1002/advs.202306683
How cool would it be to perfect this. The lives it could save and improve would be incredible. This takes out the practice of growing human organs within compatible species, so it not only saves the patients life but an animal's life as well. I feel there may be many ethical dilemmas within this practice. One of them being how are they obtaining these stem cells and are they farming embryos for these stem cells. I remember watching a drama documentary about a real situation in which an Italian doctor attempted this in human patients with artificial tracheas but had no success and the patients all sadly did not live. That was definitely a rushed job with no consideration of the actual viability of the procedure, but with further testing and perfecting of these 3D printed organs I believe it's not too far away in the future. Thank you for sharing!
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