Biocompatible Inkjet Printing Technique for Designed Seeding of Individual Living Cells

Makoto Nakamura(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Akiko Kobayashi(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Fumio Takagi(Epson Information Technology College), Akihiko Watanabe(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Yuko Hiruma(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Katsuhiro Ohuchi(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Yasuhiko Iwasaki(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Mikio HORIE(Tokyo Institute of Technology), Ikuo Morita(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Setsuo Takatani(Tokyo Medical and Dental University)
Tissue Engineering
November 1, 2005
Cited by 538

Abstract

Inkjet printers are capable of printing at high resolution by ejecting extremely small ink drops. Established printing technology will be able to seed living cells, at micrometer resolution, in arrangements similar to biological tissues. We describe the use of a biocompatible inkjet head and our investigation of the feasibility of microseeding with living cells. Living cells are easily damaged by heat; therefore, we used an electrostatically driven inkjet system that was able to eject ink without generating significant heat. Bovine vascular endothelial cells were prepared and suspended in culture medium, and the cell suspension was used as "ink" and ejected onto culture disks. Microscopic observation showed that the endothelial cells were situated in the ejected dots in the medium, and that the number of cells in each dot was dependent on the concentration of the cell suspension and ejection frequency chosen. After the ejected cells were incubated for a few hours, they adhered to the culture disks. Using our non-heat-generating, electrostatically driven inkjet system, living cells were safely ejected onto culture disks. This microseeding technique with living cells has the potential to advance the field of tissue engineering.


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