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      3D bioprinting of photocrosslinkable hydrogel constructs

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      Journal of Applied Polymer Science
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Thiol-ene click chemistry.

          Following Sharpless' visionary characterization of several idealized reactions as click reactions, the materials science and synthetic chemistry communities have pursued numerous routes toward the identification and implementation of these click reactions. Herein, we review the radical-mediated thiol-ene reaction as one such click reaction. This reaction has all the desirable features of a click reaction, being highly efficient, simple to execute with no side products and proceeding rapidly to high yield. Further, the thiol-ene reaction is most frequently photoinitiated, particularly for photopolymerizations resulting in highly uniform polymer networks, promoting unique capabilities related to spatial and temporal control of the click reaction. The reaction mechanism and its implementation in various synthetic methodologies, biofunctionalization, surface and polymer modification, and polymerization are all reviewed.
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            Organ printing: tissue spheroids as building blocks.

            Organ printing can be defined as layer-by-layer additive robotic biofabrication of three-dimensional functional living macrotissues and organ constructs using tissue spheroids as building blocks. The microtissues and tissue spheroids are living materials with certain measurable, evolving and potentially controllable composition, material and biological properties. Closely placed tissue spheroids undergo tissue fusion - a process that represents a fundamental biological and biophysical principle of developmental biology-inspired directed tissue self-assembly. It is possible to engineer small segments of an intraorgan branched vascular tree by using solid and lumenized vascular tissue spheroids. Organ printing could dramatically enhance and transform the field of tissue engineering by enabling large-scale industrial robotic biofabrication of living human organ constructs with "built-in" perfusable intraorgan branched vascular tree. Thus, organ printing is a new emerging enabling technology paradigm which represents a developmental biology-inspired alternative to classic biodegradable solid scaffold-based approaches in tissue engineering.
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              Additive manufacturing of tissues and organs

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Applied Polymer Science
                J. Appl. Polym. Sci.
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00218995
                December 20 2015
                December 20 2015
                : 132
                : 48
                : n/a
                Article
                10.1002/app.42458
                2888bf4d-9dc2-49f5-b264-fc67f7c179b6
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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