The Mercury News

A possible weapon against the pandemic: printing human tissue.

Bioprintin­g tissue can be used to test drugs against many diseases

- Sy GllEn RosEn

As shortages of personal protective equipment persist during the coronaviru­s pandemic, 3D printing has helped to alleviate some of the gaps. But Anthony Atala, director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerati­ve Medicine, and his team are using the process in a more innovative way: creating tiny replicas of human organs some as small as a pinhead to test drugs to fight COVID-19.

The team is constructi­ng miniature lungs and colons two organs particular­ly affected by the coronaviru­s then sending them overnight by courier for testing at a biosafety lab at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. While they initially created some of the organoids by hand using a pipette, they are beginning to print these at scale for research as the pandemic continues to surge.

In the last few years, Atala’s institute had already printed these tiny clusters of cells to

test drug efficacy against bacteria and infectious diseases like the Zika virus, “but we never thought we’d be considerin­g this for a pandemic,” he said. His team has the ability to print “thousands an hour,” he said from his lab in WinstonSal­em, North Carolina.

The process of constructi­ng human tissue this way is a form of bioprintin­g. While its use in humans is still years away, researcher­s are honing the methods

to test drugs and, eventually, to create skin and full-size organs for transplant­ing. Researcher­s are making strides in printing skin, critical for burn victims; managing diseases like diabetes in which wound healing is difficult; and for the testing of cosmetics without harming animals, or, of course, humans.

“Even to us it sometimes seems like science fiction,” said Akhilesh Gaharwar, who directs a cross-disciplina­ry lab in the biomedical engineerin­g department at Texas A&M University that focuses on bioprintin­g and other approaches to regenerati­ve medicine.

Bioprintin­g’s importance for pharmaceut­ical analysis is paramount now, not only for potential COVID-19 treatments but also for testing treatments for cancer and other diseases. Atala says that the organoids allow researcher­s to analyze a drug’s effect on an organ “without the noise” of an individual’s metabolism.

He cited Rezulin, a popular diabetes drug recalled in 2000 after there was evidence of liver failure. His lab tested an archived version of the drug, and Atala said that within two weeks, the liver toxicity became apparent. What accounts for the difference? An organoid replicates an organ in its purest form and offers data points that might not occur in clinical trials, he said, adding that the testing is additive to, rather than in lieu of, clinical trials.

Testing on bioprinted skin or other miniature organs also can more readily determine which drugs that work in animals like rats might not perform well in people.

“The 3D models can circumvent animal testing and make the pathway stronger from the lab to the clinic,” Gaharwar said. That has importance for consumer goods as well as pharmaceut­icals; since 2013, the European Union, for example, has prohibited cosmetics companies from testing products on animals.

The foundation for a printed organ is known as a scaffold, made of biodegrada­ble materials. To provide nutrition for the organoid, microscopi­c channels only 50 microns in diameter roughly half the size of a human hair are included in the scaffold. Once completed, the “bioink,” a liquid combinatio­n of cells and hydrogel that turns into gelatin, is then printed onto the scaffold “like a layer cake,” Atala said.

Another important part of the process is constructi­ng blood vessels as part

of the printing. Pankaj Karande, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineerin­g at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, has been experiment­ing with skin printing since 2014 and recently had success in this step.

Using a cell known as a fibroblast, which helps with growth, along with collagen, as a scaffold, researcher­s at the institute printed the epidermis and dermis, the first two layers of skin. (The hypodermis is the third layer.) “It turns out the skin cells don’t mind being sheared,” Karande said, and they could ultimately survive.

But their work hit a snag: Without incorporat­ing blood vessels, the skin eventually sloughs off. Collaborat­ing with Jordan Pober and W. Mark Saltzman of Yale University, they eventually succeeded in constructi­ng all three layers of human skin as well as vasculatur­e, or blood vessels, which Karande said was essential to the skin’s surviving after it had been

A heart, liver and kidney structure from 3-D printing is seen at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerati­ve Medicine.

grafted.

The three began experiment­ing with integratin­g human endothelia­l cells, which line blood vessels, and human pericyte cells, which surround the endothelia­l cells, into the skin as it was printed. Eventually, after much trial and error, they were able to integrate the blood vessels with the skin and found that connection­s were formed between new and existing blood vessels.

While the work is preliminar­y tested in mice Karande said he was hopeful that the success in printing integrated skin and vasculatur­e would set the stage for successful grafting in humans eventually.

The research, according to Karande, is painstakin­g and involves a lot of trial and error. “We have Plan A, which we often know won’t work, and then we go down the list. We can often write about what works in

five pages but have 5,000 pages of what didn’t work,” he added.

Gaharwar’s lab is also investigat­ing whether human bone tissue can be printed for eventual transplant­ation. His hope, he says, is that in the future, patient radiograph­ic scans can be translated into the exact shape needed for implantati­on, especially important in repairing craniofaci­al defects in which the curvature needed can be difficult to re-create.

Like Gaharwar, Karande says that personaliz­ation is important. He says that his work has already shown that skin can be fabricated to match an individual’s color. And, because the skin is also critical in regulating body temperatur­e, he is also working to engineer sweat glands into the skin, along with hair follicles.

“When we graft, we want to be able to re-create the full functional­ity of the skin,” Karande said. And by using the cells from a patient, rather than a donor, the risk of rejection is minimized

or eliminated altogether.

Not surprising­ly, researcher­s are also exploring the collection of data from testing. The team at Wake Forest is partnering with technology company Oracle to capture the data from the organoids and analyze it with artificial intelligen­ce. The project, known generally as the body-on-achip system, involves printing living tissue on a microchip to allow drugs to be studied for toxicity and efficacy even before clinical trials begin. The chips can be the size of a nickel or quarter, which is big enough to hold 10 to 12 miniature organs.

“We work a lot with researcher­s, pharmaceut­ical companies and biotech companies, and we are trying to seed advances as quickly as possible, analyze data and develop new drugs,” said Rebecca Laborde, master principal scientist in Oracle’s health sciences division. “This is the most exciting project I’ve worked on in a long time.”

 ??  ??
 ?? RENSSELAER POLYTECHNI­C INSTITUTE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ARCHIVES ?? Pankaj Karande, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineerin­g at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, has been experiment­ing with skin printing since 2014. Bioprintin­g could be used for testing potential treatments for COVID-19, cancer and other diseases.
RENSSELAER POLYTECHNI­C INSTITUTE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ARCHIVES Pankaj Karande, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineerin­g at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, has been experiment­ing with skin printing since 2014. Bioprintin­g could be used for testing potential treatments for COVID-19, cancer and other diseases.
 ?? JEREMY M. LANGE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerati­ve Medicine Anthony Atala said his team could bioprint “thousands an hour.”
JEREMY M. LANGE — THE NEW YORK TIMES Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerati­ve Medicine Anthony Atala said his team could bioprint “thousands an hour.”
 ?? WAKE FOREST INSTITUTE FOR REGENERATI­VE MEDICINE VIA THE NYT ??
WAKE FOREST INSTITUTE FOR REGENERATI­VE MEDICINE VIA THE NYT

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