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iDEA: DREXEL LIBRARIES E-REPOSITORY AND ARCHIVES
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Biofabrication of three-dimensional liver cell-embedded tissue constructs for in vitro drug metabolism models
Biofabrication of three-dimensional liver cell-embedded tissue constructs for in vitro drug metabolism models
Details
Title
Biofabrication of three-dimensional liver cell-embedded tissue constructs for in vitro drug metabolism models
Author(s)
Chang, Robert Chao
Advisor(s)
Sun, Wei, 1957-
Keywords
Mechanical engineering
;
Drugs -- Metabolism
;
Tissue engineering
Date
2009-06
Publisher
Drexel University
Thesis
Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering -- Drexel University, 2009
Abstract
In their normal in vivo matrix milieu, tissues assume complex well-organized threedimensional architectures. Therefore, a primary aim in the tissue engineering design process is to fabricate an optimal analog of the in vivo scenario. This challenge can be addressed by applying emerging layered biofabrication approaches in which the precise configuration and composition of cells and bioactive matrix components can recapitulate the well-defined three-dimensional biomimetic microenvironments that promote cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. Furthermore, the advent of and refinements in microfabricated systems can present physical and chemical cues to cells in a controllable and reproducible fashion unrealizable with conventional tissue culture, resulting in highfidelity, high-throughput in vitro models. As such, the convergence of layered solid freeform fabrication (SFF) technologies along with microfabrication techniques, a threedimensional micro-organ device can serve as an in vitro platform for cell culture, drug screening, or to elicit further biological insights, particularly for NASA’s interest of a flight-suitable high-fidelity microscale platform to study drug metabolism in space and planetary environments. A proposed model in this thesis involves the combinatorial setup of an automated syringe-based, layered direct cell writing bioprinting process with micropatterning techniques to fabricate a microscale in vitro device housing a chamber of bioprinted three-dimensional cell-encapsulated hydrogel-based tissue constructs in defined design patterns that biomimics the cell’s natural microenvironment for enhanced performance and functionality. In order to assess the structural formability and biological feasibility of such a micro-organ, reproducibly fabricated tissue constructs arebiologically characterized for both viability and cell-specific function. Another key facet of the in vivo microenvironment that is recapitulated with the in vitro system is the necessary dynamic perfusion of the three-dimensional microscale liver analog with cells probed for their collective drug metabolic function and suitability as a drug metabolism model. This thesis details the principles, methods, and engineering science basis that undergird the direct cell writing fabrication process development and adaptation of microfluidic devices for the creation of a drug screening model, thereby establishing a novel drug metabolism study platform for NASA’s interest to adopt a microfluidic microanalytical device with an embedded three-dimensional microscale liver tissue analog to assess drug pharmacokinetic profiles in planetary environments.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1860/3069
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