The approach could revolutionise regenerative medicine, enabling the production of complex tissues and cartilage that would potentially support, repair or augment diseased and damaged areas of the body, researchers said.
Scientists at the University of Oxford in the UK devised a way to produce tissues in self-contained cells that support the structures to keep their shape.
The cells were contained within protective nanolitre droplets wrapped in a lipid coating that could be assembled, layer-by-layer, into living structures.
To be useful, artificial tissues need to be able to mimic the behaviours and functions of the human body, researchers said.
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The method enables the fabrication of patterned cellular constructs, which, once fully grown, mimic or potentially enhance natural tissues.
"We were aiming to fabricate three-dimensional living tissues that could display the basic behaviours and physiology found in natural organisms," said Alexander Graham, scientist at OxSyBio (Oxford Synthetic Biology).
"Hence, we focused on designing a high-resolution cell printing platform, from relatively inexpensive components, that could be used to reproducibly produce artificial tissues with appropriate complexity from a range of cells including stem cells," said Graham.
The research was published in the journal Scientific Reports.
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