Abstract
The creation of complex cellular environments is critical to mimicking tissue environments that will play a critical role in next-generation tissue engineering, stem cell programming, and therapeutic screening. To address this growing need, techniques capable of manipulating cell-cell and cell-material interactions are required that span single-cell to 3D tissue architectures. DNA programmed assembly and placement of cells present a powerful technique for the bottom-up synthesis of living microtissues for probing key questions in cell-cell and cell-material-driven behaviors through its refined control over placement and architecture. This review examines the current state of the art in the programming of cellular interactions with DNA and its applications spanning tissue model building, fundamental cellular biology, and cell manipulation for measurements across a host of applications.
Published Version
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