TY - JOUR
T1 - Engineering Multi-Cellular Spheroids for Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
AU - Kim, Se jeong
AU - Kim, Eun Mi
AU - Yamamoto, Masaya
AU - Park, Hansoo
AU - Shin, Heungsoo
N1 - Funding Information:
S.‐j.K. and E.M.K. contributed equally to this work. This work was supported under the framework of international cooperation program managed by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF‐2020K2A9A2A08000126, FY2020/NRF‐2019R1A2C2084965, NRF‐2020R1A4A3078645) and a grant from the Technology Innovation Program (10050526, Development of disposable diaper based on biomass‐oriented biodegradable super absorbent polymers) funded by the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MI, Korea).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2020/12/2
Y1 - 2020/12/2
N2 - Multi-cellular spheroids are formed as a 3D structure with dense cell–cell/cell–extracellular matrix interactions, and thus, have been widely utilized as implantable therapeutics and various ex vivo tissue models in tissue engineering. In principle, spheroid culture methods maximize cell–cell cohesion and induce spontaneous cellular assembly while minimizing cellular interactions with substrates by using physical forces such as gravitational or centrifugal forces, protein-repellant biomaterials, and micro-structured surfaces. In addition, biofunctional materials including magnetic nanoparticles, polymer microspheres, and nanofiber particles are combined with cells to harvest composite spheroids, to accelerate spheroid formation, to increase the mechanical properties and viability of spheroids, and to direct differentiation of stem cells into desirable cell types. Biocompatible hydrogels are developed to produce microgels for the fabrication of size-controlled spheroids with high efficiency. Recently, spheroids have been further engineered to fabricate structurally and functionally reliable in vitro artificial 3D tissues of the desired shape with enhanced specific biological functions. This paper reviews the overall characteristics of spheroids and general/advanced spheroid culture techniques. Significant roles of functional biomaterials in advanced spheroid engineering with emphasis on the use of spheroids in the reconstruction of artificial 3D tissue for tissue engineering are also thoroughly discussed.
AB - Multi-cellular spheroids are formed as a 3D structure with dense cell–cell/cell–extracellular matrix interactions, and thus, have been widely utilized as implantable therapeutics and various ex vivo tissue models in tissue engineering. In principle, spheroid culture methods maximize cell–cell cohesion and induce spontaneous cellular assembly while minimizing cellular interactions with substrates by using physical forces such as gravitational or centrifugal forces, protein-repellant biomaterials, and micro-structured surfaces. In addition, biofunctional materials including magnetic nanoparticles, polymer microspheres, and nanofiber particles are combined with cells to harvest composite spheroids, to accelerate spheroid formation, to increase the mechanical properties and viability of spheroids, and to direct differentiation of stem cells into desirable cell types. Biocompatible hydrogels are developed to produce microgels for the fabrication of size-controlled spheroids with high efficiency. Recently, spheroids have been further engineered to fabricate structurally and functionally reliable in vitro artificial 3D tissues of the desired shape with enhanced specific biological functions. This paper reviews the overall characteristics of spheroids and general/advanced spheroid culture techniques. Significant roles of functional biomaterials in advanced spheroid engineering with emphasis on the use of spheroids in the reconstruction of artificial 3D tissue for tissue engineering are also thoroughly discussed.
KW - 3D tissues
KW - biomaterials
KW - cellular aggregates
KW - spheroid engineering
KW - spheroids
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U2 - 10.1002/adhm.202000608
DO - 10.1002/adhm.202000608
M3 - Review article
C2 - 32734719
AN - SCOPUS:85088791211
SN - 2192-2640
VL - 9
JO - Advanced healthcare materials
JF - Advanced healthcare materials
IS - 23
M1 - 2000608
ER -