3D printing of anisotropic bone-mimetic structure with controlled fluid flow stimuli for osteocytes: Flow orientation determines the elongation of dendrites

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Abstract

Although three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting techniques enable the construction of various living tissues and organs, the generation of bone-like oriented microstructures with anisotropic texture remains a challenge. Inside the mineralized bone matrix, osteocytes play mechanosensing roles in an ordered manner with a well-developed lacunar-canaliculi system. Therefore, control of cellular arrangement and dendritic processes is indispensable for construction of artificially controlled 3D bone-mimetic architecture. Herein, we propose an innovative methodology to induce controlled arrangement of osteocyte dendritic processes using the laminated layer method of oriented collagen sheets, combined with a custom-made fluid flow stimuli system. Osteocyte dendritic processes showed elongation depending on the competitive directional relationship between flow and substrate. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to report the successful construction of the anisotropic bone-mimetic microstructure and further demonstrate that the dendritic process formation in osteocytes can be controlled with selective fluid flow stimuli, specifically by regulating focal adhesion. Our results demonstrate how osteocytes adapt to mechanical stimuli by optimizing the anisotropic maturation of dendritic cell processes.

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Matsugaki, A., Matsuzaka, T., Murakami, A., Wang, P., & Nakano, T. (2020). 3D printing of anisotropic bone-mimetic structure with controlled fluid flow stimuli for osteocytes: Flow orientation determines the elongation of dendrites. International Journal of Bioprinting, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.18063/IJB.V6I4.293

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