Bioengineers Found a Way to Create 3D Shapes From Living Tissue
Bioengineers from the University of California, San Fransisco (UCSF) have figured out how to create bowls, coils, and ripples out of actual, living tissue. The researchers manipulated active cells from both mice and humans into folding themselves in ways that occur during natural development.
Bioengineers from the University of California, San Fransisco (UCSF) have figured out how to create bowls, coils, and ripples out of actual, living tissue. The researchers manipulated active cells from both mice and humans into folding themselves in ways that occur during natural development.
Senior author Zev Gartner, part of the Center for Cellular Construction at the University of California, San Francisco said, “Development is starting to become a canvas for engineering, and by breaking the complexity of development down into simpler engineering principles, scientists are beginning to better understand, and ultimately control, the fundamental biology. In this case, the intrinsic ability of mechanically active cells to promote changes in tissue shape is a fantastic chassis for building complex and functional synthetic tissues.”
Gartner and his colleagues use a unique method known as DNA-programmed assembly of cells (DPAC), which is a precision 3D cell-patterning technology. With this technology and active cells, they were able to create a tissue template which can fold and form itself in ways that occur organically during development.
Alex Hughes, first author and postdoctoral fellow at UCSF stated that “We’re beginning to see that it’s possible to break down natural developmental processes into engineering principles that we can then repurpose to build and understand tissues. It’s a totally new angle in tissue engineering.”
The team created simple models to predict the behavior, development and folding patterns of these cells and tissues. And, as a bit of a surprise to the team, the cells behaved as predicted, allowing the team to build living constructs from developmental folding and shape-forming behaviors.
Going forward, the team hopes to explore the possibility of combining the developmental basis that dictates these folding patterns with other methods, natural or otherwise, of controlling tissue patterns and development. The group also aims to better understand how cells differentiate in response to mechanical changes that happen during tissue folding.
It’s difficult to say exactly what applications the technique could have outside of research, but perhaps one day will we start seeing objects and shapes commercially developed using living cells. Could we one day use mechanical instruments, devices, and tools made with components of biological origin?
The fields of cybernetic organisms and soft robots are advancing and developing rapidly. It would be premature to consider the realistic potential of this study for commercial applications, but even if it’s speculative for now, the ability to program biological materials into folding and developing 3-dimensional shapes and have control over manipulating active cells is certainly useful to researchers.
Reference: http://www.cell.com/developmental-cell/fulltext/S1534-5807(17)30989-9
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