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Light-Based 3D Printing of Gelatin-Based Biomaterial Inks to Create a Physiologically Relevant In Vitro Fish Intestinal Model
Authors:Anna Szabó  Rolando Pasquariello  Pedro F. Costa  Radmila Pavlovic  Indi Geurs  Koen Dewettinck  Chris Vervaet  Tiziana A. L. Brevini  Fulvio Gandolfi  Sandra Van Vlierberghe
Affiliation:1. Polymer Chemistry and Biomaterials Group, Centre of Macromolecular Chemistry (CMaC), Department of Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry, Ghent University, Krijgslaan 281, Ghent, 9000 Belgium;2. Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of Milan, Via Domenico Trentacoste, Milan, 2-20134 Italy;3. Biofabics Lda, Rua do Campo Lindo 168, Porto, 4200-143 Portugal;4. Protemoics and Metabolomics Facility (ProMeFa), IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Via Olgettina, 60, Milan, 20132 Italy;5. Department of Food Technology, Safety and Health, Food Structure & Function Research Group, Ghent University, Coupure Links 653, Gent, 9000 Belgium;6. Department of Pharmaceutics, Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Technology, Ghent University, Ottergemsesteenweg 460, Ghent, 9000 Belgium;7. Department of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences, Laboratory of Biomedical Embryology, Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Dell'Università 6, Lodi, 26900 Italy
Abstract:
To provide prominent accessibility of fishmeal to the European population, the currently available, time- and cost-extensive feeding trials, which evaluate fish feed, should be replaced. The current paper reports on the development of a novel 3D culture platform, mimicking the microenvironment of the intestinal mucosa in vitro. The key requirements of the model include sufficient permeability for nutrients and medium-size marker molecules (equilibrium within 24 h), suitable mechanical properties (G' < 10 kPa), and close morphological similarity to the intestinal architecture. To enable processability with light-based 3D printing, a gelatin-methacryloyl-aminoethyl-methacrylate-based biomaterial ink is developed and combined with Tween 20 as porogen to ensure sufficient permeability. To assess the permeability properties of the hydrogels, a static diffusion setup is utilized, indicating that the hydrogel constructs are permeable for a medium size marker molecule (FITC-dextran 4 kg mol−1). Moreover, the mechanical evaluation through rheology evidence a physiologically relevant scaffold stiffness (G' = 4.83 ± 0.78 kPa). Digital light processing-based 3D printing of porogen-containing hydrogels results in the creation of constructs exhibiting a physiologically relevant microarchitecture as evidenced through cryo-scanning electron microscopy. Finally, the combination of the scaffolds with a novel rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) intestinal epithelial cell line (RTdi-MI) evidence scaffold biocompatibility.
Keywords:digital light processing  fish tissue engineering  gelatin  hydrogels
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