Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute:

"Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have developed a way to 3-D 
print living skin, complete with blood vessels. The advancement, published 
online today in Tissue Engineering Part A, is a significant step toward 
creating grafts that are more like the skin our bodies produce naturally.

"Right now, whatever is available as a clinical product is more like a fancy 
Band-Aid," said Pankaj Karande, an associate professor of chemical and 
biological engineering and member of the Center for Biotechnology and 
Interdisciplinary Studies (CBIS), who led this research at Rensselaer. "It 
provides some accelerated wound healing, but eventually it just falls off; it 
never really integrates with the host cells."

A significant barrier to that integration has been the absence of a functioning 
vascular system in the skin grafts.

Karande has been working on this challenge for several years, previously 
publishing one of the first papers showing that researchers could take two 
types of living human cells, make them into "bio-inks," and print them into a 
skin-like structure. Since then, he and his team have been working with 
researchers from Yale School of Medicine to incorporate vasculature.

In this paper, the researchers show that if they add key elements—including 
human endothelial cells, which line the inside of blood vessels, and human 
pericyte cells, which wrap around the endothelial cells—with animal collagen 
and other structural cells typically found in a skin graft, the cells start 
communicating and forming a biologically relevant vascular structure within the 
span of a few weeks. You can watch Karande explain this development here.

"As engineers working to recreate biology, we've always appreciated and been 
aware of the fact that biology is far more complex than the simple systems we 
make in the lab," Karande said. "We were pleasantly surprised to find that, 
once we start approaching that complexity, biology takes over and starts 
getting closer and closer to what exists in nature."

Once the Yale team grafted it onto a special type of mouse, the vessels from 
the skin printed by the Rensselaer team began to communicate and connect with 
the mouse's own vessels.

"That's extremely important, because we know there is actually a transfer of 
blood and nutrients to the graft which is keeping the graft alive," Karande 
said.

In order to make this usable at a clinical level, researchers need to be able 
to edit the donor cells using something like the CRISPR technology, so that the 
vessels can integrate and be accepted by the patient's body.

"We are still not at that step, but we are one step closer," Karande said.

"This significant development highlights the vast potential of 3-D bioprinting 
in precision medicine, where solutions can be tailored to specific situations 
and eventually to individuals," said Deepak Vashishth, the director CBIS. "This 
is a perfect example of how engineers at Rensselaer are solving challenges 
related to human health."

Karande said more work will need to be done to address the challenges 
associated with burn patients, which include the loss of nerve and vascular 
endings. But the grafts his team has created bring researchers closer to 
helping people with more discrete issues, like diabetic or pressure ulcers.

"For those patients, these would be perfect, because ulcers usually appear at 
distinct locations on the body and can be addressed with smaller pieces of 
skin," Karande said. "Wound healing typically takes longer in diabetic 
patients, and this could also help to accelerate that process." 

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-11-skin-d-printed-blood-vessels.html
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