2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(567a) Assembly of Embryonic Stem Cell/Scaffold Three-Dimensional Constructs Using Carbon Dioxide Assisted Polymer Fusion
Authors
Yubing Xie - Presenter, College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, University at Albany, State University of New York
Yong Yang, Duke University
Xihai Kang, The Ohio State University
L. James Lee, The Ohio State University
Douglas A. Kniss, The Ohio State University
Tissues are composed of multiple cells with well-organized three-dimensional (3-D) structure. Tissue-engineered constructs require well-defined 3-D chemical and spatial control over cells to assemble them into a functional structure that more faithfully mimics the tissue in vivo. Pattern formation is a hallmark of the precise control of cell behavior to recapitulate developmental processes in tissue- and organ-specific differentiation and morphogenesis. However, most of patterning is two-dimensional (2-D). It is challenge to assemble the 2-D patterned surfaces with cells into 3-D structure. Here, using low-pressure carbon dioxide, we demonstrated a biologically permissive fusion approach to assembling polymeric well-defined microstructure with embryonic stem (ES) cells grown on it into a multilayer cell-scaffold constructs. The mouse ES cells in the assembled constructs are viable, maintain the ES cell-specific gene expression of Oct-4, a canonical marker of pluripotency, and can further form embryonic bodies. In addition to tissue engineering, this CO2-assisted bio-assembly method can have wide applications in polymer-based MEMS/NEMS, such as biochips and drug/gene delivery devices.