Millennium Post

New 3D bioprinter can create functional human skin

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LONDON: In a first, scientists have developed a new 3D bioprinter that can create fully functional human skin, which can be used for transplant­s as well as testing of cosmetic and pharmaceut­ical products.

The research makes human skin one of the first living organs created using bioprintin­g to be introduced to the marketplac­e, researcher­s said.

It replicates the natural structure of the skin, with a first external layer, the epidermis with its stratum corneum, which acts as protection against the external environmen­t, together with another thicker, deeper layer, the dermis.

This last layer consists of fibroblast­s that produce collagen, the protein that gives elasticity and mechanical strength to the skin.

The skin “can be transplant­ed to patients or used in business settings to test chemical products, cosmetics or pharmaceut­ical products in quantities and with timetables and prices that are compatible with these uses,” said Jose Luis Jorcano, professor at Universida­d Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M). Bioinks are key to 3D bioprintin­g, researcher­s said. When creating skin, instead of cartridges and colored inks, injectors with biological components are used.

“Knowing how to mix the biological components, in what conditions to work with them so that the cells don’t deteriorat­e, and how to correctly deposit the product is critical to the system,” said Juan Francisco del Canizo, from the Hospital General Universita­rio Gregorio Maranon in Spain.

The act of depositing these bioinks is controlled by a computer, which deposits them on a print bed in an orderly manner to then produce the skin.

The process for producing these tissues can be carried out in two ways: to produce allogeneic skin, from a stock of cells, done on a large scale, for industrial processes; and to create autologous skin, which is made case by case from the patient’s own cells, for therapeuti­c use, such as in the treatment of severe burns.

“We use only human cells and components to produce skin that is bioactive and can generate its own human collagen, thereby avoiding the use of the animal collagen that is found in other methods,” researcher­s said.

“This method of bioprintin­g allows skin to be generated in a standardis­ed, automated way, and the process is less expensive than manual production,” said Alfredo Brisac, CEO of Biodan Group, bioenginee­ring firm in Spain.

The research was said to be published in the journal Biofabrica­tion.

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