3D Electrophoresis-assisted lithography (3DEAL): 3D molecular printing to create functional patterns and anisotropic hydrogels

Author

Aguilar, Juan P.

Lipka, Michal

Primo, Gastón A.

Licon Bernal, Edxon Eduardo

Fernández Pradas, Juan Marcos

Yaroshchuk, Andriy

Albericio Palomera, Fernando

Mata, Álvaro

Publication date

2019-06-04T12:23:20Z

2019-06-04T12:23:20Z

2018-04-11

2019-06-04T12:23:21Z



Abstract

The ability to easily generate anisotropic hydrogel environments made from functional molecules with microscale resolution is an exciting possibility for the biomaterials community. This study reports a novel 3D electrophoresis‐assisted lithography (3DEAL) platform that combines elements from proteomics, biotechnology, and microfabrication to print well‐defined 3D molecular patterns within hydrogels. The potential of the 3DEAL platform is assessed by patterning immunoglobulin G, fibronectin, and elastin within nine widely used hydrogels and characterizing pattern depth, resolution, and aspect ratio. Furthermore, the technique's versatility is demonstrated by fabricating complex patterns including parallel and perpendicular columns, curved lines, gradients of molecular composition, and patterns of multiple proteins ranging from tens of micrometers to centimeters in size and depth. The functionality of the printed molecules is assessed by culturing NIH‐3T3 cells on a fibronectin‐patterned polyacrylamide‐collagen hydrogel and selectively supporting cell growth. 3DEAL is a simple, accessible, and versatile hydrogel‐patterning platform based on controlled molecular printing that may enable the development of tunable, chemically anisotropic, and hierarchical 3D environments.

Document Type

Article
Accepted version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Electroforesi; Litografia; Impressió 3D; Biotecnologia; Electrophoresis; Lithography; Three-dimensional printing; Biotechnology

Publisher

Wiley-VCH

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201703014

Advanced Functional Materials, 2018, vol. 28, num. 15, p. 1703014

https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201703014

Rights

(c) Wiley-VCH, 2018