Organ‐On‐A‐Chip Platforms: A Convergence of Advanced Materials, Cells, and Microscale TechnologiesSamad Ahadian, Robert Civitarese, Dawn Bannerman et al.|Advanced Healthcare Materials|2017 Significant advances in biomaterials, stem cell biology, and microscale technologies have enabled the fabrication of biologically relevant tissues and organs. Such tissues and organs, referred to as organ-on-a-chip (OOC) platforms, have emerged as a powerful tool in tissue analysis and disease modeling for biological and pharmacological applications. A variety of biomaterials are used in tissue fabrication providing multiple biological, structural, and mechanical cues in the regulation of cell behavior and tissue morphogenesis. Cells derived from humans enable the fabrication of personalized OOC platforms. Microscale technologies are specifically helpful in providing physiological microenvironments for tissues and organs. In this review, biomaterials, cells, and microscale technologies are described as essential components to construct OOC platforms. The latest developments in OOC platforms (e.g., liver, skeletal muscle, cardiac, cancer, lung, skin, bone, and brain) are then discussed as functional tools in simulating human physiology and metabolism. Future perspectives and major challenges in the development of OOC platforms toward accelerating clinical studies of drug discovery are finally highlighted.
Poly(Vinyl Alcohol) Cryogels for Biomedical ApplicationsWankei Wan, Dawn Bannerman, Lifang Yang et al.|Advances in polymer science|2014 Organ‐On‐A‐Chip Platforms: A Convergence of Advanced Materials, Cells, and Microscale TechnologiesSamad Ahadian, Robert Civitarese, Dawn Bannerman et al.|Advanced Healthcare Materials|2018 should be corrected to:For example, Bischel at al. introduced a cell-laden hydrogel inside a microfluidic channel to create a lumen (Figure 4A). [339] Trietsch et al. constructed a microfluidic plate system having 96 chambers.The flow between microfluidic chambers was provided using passive pressure without using external pumps (Figure 4B) [340] Ata et al. showed a coculture of skin tissue with hair follicles in a microfluidic Boyden chamber-like system (Figure 4C). [168] An additional reference should be cited at the end of the following sentence on page 15, "Frey et al. demonstrated a perfused system of colorectal cancer spheroids and liver.Drug metabolism was studied using this system (Figure 4D)".
3D Printing of Vascular Tubes Using Bioelastomer Prepolymers by Freeform Reversible EmbeddingBioelastomers have been extensively used in tissue engineering applications because of favorable mechanical stability, tunable properties, and chemical versatility. As these materials generally possess low elastic modulus and relatively long gelation time, it is challenging to 3D print them using traditional techniques. Instead, the field of 3D printing has focused preferentially on hydrogels and rigid polyester materials. To develop a versatile approach for 3D printing of elastomers, we used freeform reversible embedding of suspended prepolymers. A family of novel fast photocrosslinakble bioelastomer prepolymers were synthesized from dimethyl itaconate, 1,8-octanediol, and triethyl citrate. Tensile testing confirmed their elastic properties with Young's moduli in the range of 11-53 kPa. These materials supported cultivation of viable cells and enabled adhesion and proliferation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Tubular structures were created by embedding the 3D printed microtubes within a secondary hydrogel that served as a temporary support. Upon photocrosslinking and porogen leaching, the polymers were permeable to small molecules (TRITC-dextran). The polymer microtubes were assembled on the 96-well plates custom made by hot-embossing, as a tool to connect multiple organs-on-a-chip. The endothelialization of the tubes was performed to confirm that these microtubes can be utilized as vascular tubes to support parenchymal tissues seeded on them.
One‐Pot Synthesis of Unsaturated Polyester Bioelastomer with Controllable Material Curing for Microscale DesignsLocke Davenport Huyer, Dawn Bannerman, Yufeng Wang et al.|Advanced Healthcare Materials|2019 Synthetic polyester elastomeric constructs have become increasingly important for a range of healthcare applications, due to tunable soft elastic properties that mimic those of human tissues. A number of these constructs require intricate mechanical design to achieve a tunable material with controllable curing. Here, the synthesis and characterization of poly(itaconate-co-citrate-co-octanediol) (PICO) is presented, which exhibits tunable formation of elastomeric networks through radical crosslinking of itaconate in the polymer backbone of viscous polyester gels. Through variation of reaction times and monomer molar composition, materials with modulation of a wide range of elasticity (36-1476 kPa) are generated, indicating the tunability of materials to specific elastomeric constructs. This correlated with measured rapid and controllable gelation times. As a proof of principle, scaffold support for cardiac tissue patches is developed, which presents visible tissue organization and viability with appropriate elastomeric support from PICO materials. These formulations present potential application in a range of healthcare applications with requirement for elastomeric support with controllable, rapid gelation under mild conditions.