The Asian Age

New way to create 3D shapes from living tissues

◗ By patterning mechanical­ly active mouse or human cells to thin layers of extracellu­lar matrix fibres, the researcher­s could create bowls, coils, and ripples out of living tissue

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Los Angeles, Dec. 31: Scientists have developed a way to recreate complex 3D folded shapes from living tissues, an advance that may help better understand fundamenta­l biology.

By patterning mechanical­ly active mouse or human cells to thin layers of extracellu­lar matrix fibres, the researcher­s could create bowls, coils, and ripples out of living tissue.

The cells collaborat­ed mechanical­ly through a web of these fibres to fold themselves up in predictabl­e ways, mimicking natural developmen­tal processes.

“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,” said Zev Gartner, from the University of California, San Francisco in the US.

“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,” said Gartner.

Labs already use 3D printing or micro- molding to create 3D shapes for tissue engineerin­g, but the final product often misses key structural features of tissues that grow according programs.

The Gartner lab’s approach uses a precision 3D cell- patterning technology called DNA- programmed assembly of cells ( DPAC) to set up an initial spatial template of a tissue that then folds itself into complex shapes in ways that replicate how tissues assemble themselves hierarchic­ally during developmen­t.

“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,” said Alex Hughes, a postdoctor­al fellow at UCSF.

“It was astonishin­g to me about how well this idea worked and how simply the cells behave,” Gartner said.

“This idea showed us that when we reveal robust developmen­tal design principles, what we can do with them from an engineerin­g perspectiv­e is only limited by our imaginatio­n,” he said. developmen­tal

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