Abstract

Bioprinting technology is expected to be applied in the fields of regenerative medicine and drug discovery. There are several types of bioprinters, especially inkjet-based bioprinter, which can be used not only as a printer for arranging cells but also as a precision cell-dispensing device with controlled cell numbers similar to a fluorescence activated cell sorter (FACS). Precise cell dispensers are expected to be useful in the fields of drug discovery and single-cell analysis. However, there are enduring concerns about the impacts of cell dispensers on cell integrity, particularly on sensitive cells, such as stem cells. In response to the concerns stated above, we developed a stress-free and media-direct-dispensing inkjet bioprinter. In the present study, in addition to conventional viability assessments, we evaluated the gene expression using RNA-seq to investigate whether the developed bioprinter influenced cell integrity in mouse embryonic stem cells. We evaluated the developed bioprinter based on three dispensing methods: manual operation using a micropipette, FACS and the developed inkjet bioprinter. According to the results, the developed inkjet bioprinter exhibited cell-friendly dispensing performance, which was similar to the manual dispensing operation, based not only on cell viability but also on gene expression levels.

Highlights

  • Bioprinting technology has grown in tandem with stem cell research, and it has become a vital tool with diverse applications in the biological and medical fields

  • Cell microarrays containing some types of cells, especially disease-specific induced pluripotent stem cells with controlled cell numbers on a chip, are expected to be applied to screen drug efficacy evaluation, toxicity testing and RNAi7,8 In addition, cell arrays containing individually-derived iPSCs are expected to be used as personalised pharmaceutics tools[2]

  • fluorescence activated cell sorter (FACS) is a mainstream tool in the field of precision cell dispensing with controlled cell numbers in general, but inkjet-based bioprinter can be used for such applications

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Summary

Introduction

Bioprinting technology has grown in tandem with stem cell research, and it has become a vital tool with diverse applications in the biological and medical fields. We analysed the viability and proliferation of mESCs cultured for 12, 24 and 48 h after dispensing them by manual, inkjet and FACS methods.

Results
Conclusion
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