Madison K.
Royse‡
a,
Martha
Fowler‡
a,
A. Kristen
Mai
a,
Yufang
He
b,
Marc R.
Durante
b,
Nicole
Buist
c,
Adam
Procopio
c,
Jun
Xu
*c and
Omid
Veiseh
*a
aDepartment of Bioengineering, Rice University, 6100 Main St., Houston, TX 77005, USA. E-mail: omid.veiseh@rice.edu
bDivision of Technology, Infrastructure, Operations & Experience, Merck & Co., Inc. Rahway, NJ 07065, USA
cDepartment of Pharmaceutical Sciences & Clinical Supply, Merck & Co., Inc. Rahway, NJ 07065, USA. E-mail: jun.xu8@merck.com
First published on 18th July 2024
Despite recent technological advances in drug discovery, the success rate for neurotherapeutics remains alarmingly low compared to treatments for other areas of the body. One of the biggest challenges for delivering therapeutics to the central nervous system (CNS) is the presence of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). In vitro blood–brain barrier models with high predictability are essential to aid in designing parameters for new therapeutics, assess their ability to cross the BBB, and investigate therapeutic strategies that can be employed to enhance transport. Here, we demonstrate the development of a 3D printable hydrogel blood–brain barrier model that mimics the cellular composition and structure of the blood–brain barrier with human brain endothelial cells lining the surface, pericytes in direct contact with the endothelial cells on the abluminal side of the endothelium, and astrocytes in the surrounding printed bulk matrix. We introduce a simple, static printed hemi-cylinder model to determine design parameters such as media selection, co-culture ratios, and cell incorporation timing in a resource-conservative and high-throughput manner. Presence of cellular adhesion junction, VE-Cadherin, efflux transporters, P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and Breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP), and receptor-mediated transporters, Transferrin receptor (TfR) and low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 (LRP1) were confirmed via immunostaining demonstrating the ability of this model for screening in therapeutic strategies that rely on these transport systems. Design parameters determined in the hemi-cylinder model were translated to a more complex, perfusable vessel model to demonstrate its utility for determining barrier function and assessing permeability to model therapeutic compounds. This 3D-printed blood–brain barrier model represents one of the first uses of projection stereolithography to fabricate a perfusable blood–brain barrier model, enabling the patterning of complex vessel geometries and precise arrangement of cell populations. This model demonstrates potential as a new platform to investigate the delivery of neurotherapeutic compounds and drug delivery strategies through the blood–brain barrier, providing a useful in vitro screening tool in central nervous system drug discovery and development.
Historically, studies for drug development of neuro pharmaceuticals have been assessed using both in vivo and in vitro methods. In vivo methods using animals are beneficial in recapitulating biological complexities and are generally regarded as the gold standard for preclinical validation of therapies in development,4 however, species differences between animal and human systems, such as genetic differences and lifespan, may produce results that fail to predict complications or proper efficacy in humans.5 It has been reported that more than 80% of candidate drugs deemed successful in animal models failed in clinical trials.6 Additionally, animal models are costly, labor-intensive, and are facing increasing pressure due to ethical issues associated with their use.7 As a result, there has been a shift towards developing enhanced in vitro models that incorporate more biological intricacies and can better replicate the human in vivo environment for more accurate prediction of therapeutic outcomes. Additionally, there has been recent legislation passed to push the field towards utilizing the increasingly more accurate in vitro models being developed. In December 2022, the FDA Modernization Act 2.0 was signed into law. This law eliminated the requirement that all drugs developed for humans must first be tested on animals. This legislation encourages the use of alternative testing strategies such as organ-on-a-chip and other in vitro models that enable the assessment of drug safety, thus reducing the number of animal studies performed.8
The first in vitro technologies relied on 2D cell culture for drug discovery. Models consisting of a single layer of cells grown in the lab are robust, reproducible, and easy to analyze. These models may prove helpful in assessing the cytotoxicity of a drug candidate, as well as an initial assessment of drug efficacy. However, the 2D models are limited and often cannot recapitulate crucial complexities within a physiological setting, such as fluid shear stress mechanical stimulation and interactions with neighboring cells and the extracellular matrix in a 3D environment. These factors are essential for influencing cell function, signaling pathways, stimuli response, and gene and protein expression – all crucial components for the accurate prediction of human drug response.9 Therefore, there is a need for an in vitro system that can model more complex systems to enable the screening of therapeutic compounds in a more representative environment.
For more complex, 3D, in vitro models, one of the leading technologies in this area is the organ-on-a-chip platform. Organs-on-chips are microfluidic in vitro cell culture systems that recapitulate the functions of human organs. These microfluidic devices are populated with relevant cell types in hollow 3D channels and can be cultured under perfusion to form cell layers. These models show potential for disease modeling and high-throughput drug screening to assess the physiologic response of human tissues or organs.10 The first organ-on-a-chip platform was focused on lung function and published in 2010,11 and since then, much effort has been focused on extending the platform to replicate other organs of the body, such as the heart, intestine, kidney, and liver.12
Given the challenges in drug discovery regarding neuro-pharmaceuticals, there has been significant interest in extending the organ-on-a-chip technology toward recapitulating the BBB. Microfluidics/organ-on-a-chip devices are one of the most prevalent technologies to assess BBB function. One of the most used microfluidic BBB chips is the commercially available OrganoPlate manufactured by Mimetas. It has been adapted to create a BBB model through the incorporation of brain endothelial cells, pericytes, and astrocytes.13 While the OrganoPlate is a high throughput and enables shear stress compared to traditional models, it has a few notable limitations. Perfusion in the OrganoPlate is planar and occurs via rocking, which is sub-optimal, mimicking in vivo conditions. Contrary to steady flow, oscillatory flow has the potential to disrupt cell–cell junctions and fails to induce cytoskeletal remodeling typically associated with flow conditions.14 Additionally, limitations associated with microfluidics include a technically complex fabrication procedure that makes it difficult to iterate through various architectural designs and a lack of cell–cell contacts, an essential component for recreating the blood–brain barrier in an in vitro model.
In addition to 2D cell monolayers and microfluidic chips, additional platforms have arisen as potential BBB model alternatives. Some of these include spheroids, self-assembled microvasculature, vessel-like structures in gels, and bioprinted models.15–21 For the BBB models generated via bioprinting, two-photon lithography has been used to fabricate a microfluidic system with cylindrical, porous microcapillaries, and another group has demonstrated a PCL/PLGA microfluidic perfusion system manufactured by freeze-coating a 3D-printed sacrificial template.22,23 The use of 3D bioprinting for fabricating a BBB model holds immense potential for reducing the manufacturing difficulties associated with traditional microfluidics, enabling tunable perfusion and shear stress, permitting real-time visualization of cell morphology and fabricating complex geometries that allow for the precise placement of cell types. Utilizing 3D projection stereolithography printing, we have recently demonstrated a novel 3D bioprinted perfusable vessel-mimicking hydrogel as a scalable platform for delivery of therapeutics across a cellular barrier.24
This work applies our 3D bioprinted platform to investigate fabrication methods for innovative and novel BBB models with anatomically relevant cell populations and structural organization for utilization as a scalable screening tool in drug development. A static 2.5D hemi-cylinder hydrogel model, that is easily tunable, was first fabricated for optimization of BBB conditions such as culture media selection, co-culture ratio, cell incorporation order, and culture durations. The 2.5D model demonstrated human brain endothelial cells in direct contact with pericytes, and astrocytes in the surrounding printed matrix which displayed key cellular adhesion junctions as previously demonstrated with general endothelial cells24 and relevant transporters. These optimized parameters were then extended to a 3D perfusable channel model to validate the model's potential for assessing barrier function to model compounds. Finally, this 3D BBB model was subjected to an ultrasound therapeutic to demonstrate this model's capability as a 3D BBB platform. These 3D bioprinted hydrogels model uniquely provides an in vitro platform to inform future design and screening of neurotherapeutics.
This 2.5D model of a hydrogel half pipe was created in Blender and designed with flat and curved hemispherical surfaces surrounded by 1 mm tall hydrogel walls that hold a volume of ∼50 μL of solution. After printing, the 2.5D half pipe is removed from the glass slide of the build platform with a sterile razor and equilibrated in complete AGM media. Multiple AGM media washes are performed to remove any unreacted moieties.
:
1 ratio of pericytes to endothelial cells on top of the astrocyte-containing printed half pipe. To enable HBMEC adhesion, the half pipes were seeded for 4 hours at 37 °C. After seeding, the gels were covered with 1 mL of complete Vasculife (Endothelial medium complete kit, LifeLine, LL-0003) media supplemented with 1% penicillin/streptomycin rather than gentamicin, the tri-culture hydrogel was established. These tri-culture half pipes were carried out for six days (for a total culture time of ten days for the HBAs printed in bulk, nine days for the RFP-HBMPs seeded on top of the hydrogel, and six days for the GFP-HBMECs seeded on top). Media changes were conducted daily using Vasculife media supplemented with 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Images were acquired daily on Nikon Ti epifluorescent microscope at 4×, 10×, or 20× magnification.
:
400 in 1 wt% BSA solution, and 50 μL pipetted onto each gel to incubate overnight at 4 °C. Transporters were stained for using primary antibodies for P-glycoprotein 1 (P-gp) (Rabbit polyclonal to P glycoprotein, Abcam, ab235954), breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP) (Rabbit monoclonal to BCRP/ABCG2, Abcam, ab229193), transferrin receptor (TfR) (Rabbit monoclonal to the transferrin receptor, Abcam, ab214039), and low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 (LRP1) (LRP1, Rabbit mAb #26387, Cell Signaling Technology). Primary antibodies were prepared at 1
:
50 in 1 wt% BSA solution and 50 μL pipetted onto each gel to incubate overnight at 4 °C. Following overnight incubation, 3 × 30 min washes with PBS were done before incubating with the secondary antibody (Anti-rabbit IgG (H + L) #4414, Alexa Fluor® 647 Conjugate, Cell Signaling Technology) prepared at a 1
:
500 dilution for 2 hours. A nuclear counter-stain was applied using 2.5 μg mL−1 Hoechst for 15 minutes. Finally, all gels were washed for 3 × 30 minutes with PBS before imaging. Images were acquired on Nikon A1-Rsi Confocal at 10× magnification.
After one to three days of pericyte culture, GFP-expressing human brain microvascular endothelial cells (GFP-HBMECs) (passages 5–7, AngioProteomie, cAP-0002GFP) were seeded within the channel of the HBA and RFP HBMP-containing 3D straight channel hydrogel. GFP-HBMECs were seeded at 30 × 106 cells per mL, matching the 1
:
1 ratio of endothelial cells to pericytes optimized in the 2.5D half-pipe studies. Gels were seeded for 4 hours at 37 °C and rotated 90 degrees every 15 minutes. After seeding, gels were perfused with complete Vasculife media supplemented with 1% penicillin/streptomycin at a flow rate of 5 μL min−1. After the addition of the GFP-HBMECs, the tri-culture hydrogel half pipes were carried out for three to six days (for a total culture time of ten days for the HBAs printed in bulk, nine days for the RFP HBMPs seeded on top of the hydrogel, and six days for the GFP HBMECs seeded on top), mimicking the timeline used in the 2.5D studies. Images were acquired daily on Nikon Ti epifluorescent microscope at 4×, 10×, or 20× magnification.
These permeability ultrasound studies were conducted with a continuous perfusate flow of 100 μL min−1 throughout the entire time-lapsed acquisition. The flow of the perfusate was initiated, and at the 10 minute mark, ultrasound with a frequency of 1 MHz, duty cycle of 50%, and power of 2.0 W cm−2 was applied to the hydrogel for 5 minutes. Each trial consisted of perfusate flow and image acquisition for 10 minutes to allow equilibration, 5 minutes for ultrasound application, and 5 minutes after ultrasound application, for a total of 20 minute trials. Time-lapsed acquisitions of the fluorescent molecule channel were used to calculate the apparent permeability coefficient with the equation below,
For each trial, a permeability coefficient was calculated before and after the ultrasound to assess the effects of ultrasound on permeability and barrier function. The permeability coefficient before the ultrasound was determined using the 5 minutes before the ultrasound was applied. The permeability coefficient after ultrasound was determined using the 5 minutes after the ultrasound ended.
Once Vasculife was decided as the media type to use for co-cultures, pericytes were incorporated with endothelial cells to determine additional parameters for their co-culture, specifically the timeline for culture and the ratio of endothelial cells to pericytes. The next parameter explored was the selection of timing for cell placement. Two strategies were employed: simultaneous seeding and sequential seeding. To replicate the seeding density used in the 3D channels of past,24 an equivalent surface density of 0.4 × 106 cells cm−2 was held constant for the GFP HBMECs in all studies. In the simultaneous seeding, the GFP endothelial cells and RFP pericytes were mixed and seeded onto the half pipe as a mixture of the two cell types. For the sequential seeding, the pericytes were seeded onto the half-pipe and cultured for three days before the addition of endothelial cells. After three days of endothelial cell culture, varying morphologies are observed between the two routes of timing (Fig. 2e). For the simultaneous seeding, we see a disruption of the endothelial layer. In this disruption, rather than the two cell types co-existing in the same location, they take on a mosaic-like arrangement with patches of pericytes and patches of endothelial cells. This arrangement is not ideal as the endothelium is not able to provide the necessary barrier while there are large gaps in the monolayer. In contrast, for the half pipes that were seeded using a sequential strategy, we see both the endothelial cells and pericytes covering the entirety of the half pipe without any apparent gaps. It is hypothesized that the additional time given for pericyte attachment and stabilization before adding the endothelial cells may have enabled the formation of proper contacts for the endothelial cell-pericyte interaction. Additionally, the extra time for the pericyte culture may have enabled the production and deposition of basement membrane proteins, which would also aid in endothelial adhesion and retention.
Next, this work sought to evaluate the ratio of pericytes to endothelial cells for the simultaneously seeded half pipes. The seeding density of pericytes was varied between 0.04–0.4 × 106 cells per cm−2 to mimic ratios of 10
:
1 to 1
:
1 endothelial cells to pericytes that are reported in the literature. There are various ratios of endothelial cells to pericytes found in the literature for in vitro models. Two frequently cited in vitro BBB models demonstrate a 10
:
1 ratio of endothelial cells to pericyte20 and another showing a 5
:
1 ratio of endothelial cells to pericytes.18 The CNS is generally regarded as having the highest pericyte coverage, and is reported to be between a 3
:
1 and a 1
:
1 endothelial-to-pericyte ratio.27 Pericyte density and coverage are reported to positively correlate with endothelial barrier properties, so organs that have a more restrictive endothelium, specifically the brain, generally have a higher pericyte coverage.28 Given this, the endothelial-to-pericyte ratios selected for these studies were 10
:
1, 6
:
1, 3
:
1, and 1
:
1, chosen to closely match those used in other in vitro models, as well as mimic the ratios reported for in vivo pericyte coverage. In addition to the co-culture ratios, endothelial-only and pericyte-only controls were also employed.
In doing this, pericytes were seeded on half pipes and cultured for three days before the addition of endothelial cells. After endothelial cells were added, the construct was cultured for an additional six days (a total of nine days of culture time). On the final day of culture, an interesting trend is seen across the varying ratio conditions (Fig. 2f). In both the pericyte-only and endothelial cell-only controls, the cells fill the entire length of the pipe. However, in all co-culture ratio conditions, it appears that the co-culture cell layer begins to retract from the edges of the pipe. Interestingly, it appears that both cells are detaching from the pipe surface and beginning to pull inwards towards the center of the pipe. This retraction from the sides of the half pipe is most notable in the conditions where there is a lower ratio of pericytes, specifically the 10
:
1 and 6
:
1 condition. The conditions that had a higher ratio of pericytes (1
:
1 and 3
:
1) still displayed some detachment and retraction of the cell layer. However, it was less substantial than the lower ratio conditions. The CNS has the highest pericyte to endothelial coverage throughout the body, so it is possible for these brain-specific cells that a ratio mimicking in vivo conditions is essential for proper function. Given this, the 1
:
1 ratio condition was selected as the most optimal for use in this model and is used in the studies going forward.
Once it was demonstrated that astrocytes could be printed into the bulk hydrogel, the studies progressed toward the incorporation of the pericytes and endothelial cells utilizing the optimized ratio. Hydrogel half pipes with astrocytes were printed and allowed to soak overnight before the next cell seeding. On day 0, the pericytes were seeded onto the half pipe at a density of 0.4 × 106 cells per cm2, and there was homogenous coverage of pericytes across the pipe. After three days of culture, endothelial cells were seeded on top of the astrocyte-printed pericyte-laden half pipes. These tri-culture half pipes were cultured for an additional six days for a total of nine days of culture (Fig. 3a). From these images, the endothelial and pericyte layer is retained along the surface of the half-pipe for the entire duration of the experiment, where the two cells co-exist in the same areas rather than forming gaps in one cell layer. Additionally, the endothelial layer begins to take on a more monolayer-like morphology by day six overall (day 3 endothelial cell culture). Pericytes also have a notable morphology progression over the tri-culture duration. Between days 0 and 3, the pericytes spread out along the surface of the half pipe. Their elongation and covering of the pipe continued for the remainder of the tri-culture timeline.
With the fabrication of this tri-culture using the printed half-pipe design, it was also important to assess the presence of cell–cell junctions within the model. To do this, the half pipe was immunostained for VE-Cadherin, and the presence and morphology of cell–cell junctions were analyzed. A 3D rendering of the half pipe immunostained for VE-Cadherin is shown from the side view and the top view (Fig. 3b, ESI Fig. 2†), with maximum intensity projections for each channel shown below. From this, the presence of mature cell–cell junctions is demonstrated in this 2.5D tri-culture model.
P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is a prominent BBB endothelial efflux transporter in the ABCB family, which plays a role in the transport of several compounds across the BBB. P-gp is located throughout the body in organs and tissues with either excretory functions (such as the liver, kidney, and small intestine), as well as those with BBB (such as the blood-testis barrier and placenta).30,31 P-gp is essential for maintaining brain homeostasis and ensuring harmful compounds in the bloodstream do not cross over into brain tissue. However, it can also pose a challenge for delivering therapeutics from the bloodstream across the BBB. This is a result of P-gp expelling compounds back into the bloodstream once they enter the cell membrane. As a result, many therapeutic strategies have aimed to inhibit P-gp expression to enable the transport of therapeutics across the blood–brain barrier.32
In this model, the presence of P-gp was confirmed with immunostaining on the 2.5D half-pipe, as seen in Fig. 4a. Demonstrating the presence of this efflux transporter within the hydrogel model displays sufficient complexity for use as a screening tool to assess therapeutic strategies that operate via P-gp inhibition. While immunostaining confirms the presence of these transporters, future studies may employ functional assays to confirm that these transporters are functioning as expected under the culture conditions. One area where P-gp inhibition is used as a tool is to deliver anticancer drugs. P-gp in the BBB restricts the entry of many anticancer drugs from the bloodstream to the brain. Inhibition of this efflux transporter has shown promise in delivering anticancer drugs to brain tumors via the co-administration of anticancer drugs and a P-gp inhibitor.33 In the translation to the 3D printed perfusable hydrogel model, this delivery route could be studied via the perfusion of an anticancer compound with a P-gp inhibitor and quantifying the amount of anticancer compound that has crossed the cellular barrier.
The next transporter assessed in this model was the breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP). BCRP, like P-gp, is a drug efflux ABC transporter principally expressed on the luminal membrane of brain endothelial cells. It has been demonstrated within the human blood–brain barrier that P-gp and BCRP are the central ABC transporter genes expressed in brain microvessels.34 As a result, many efflux pump inhibition strategies focus on P-gp and BCRP. In the model displayed here, the presence of the efflux transporter, BCRP, is confirmed via the use of immunostaining (Fig. 4b). This, taken together with the presence of P-gp, demonstrates that this model could be suitable for utility in screening therapeutic strategies that work via efflux pump inhibition.
The next transporter that was assessed was the transferrin receptor. Brain capillary endothelial cells have several unique properties, one being that these cells express receptors and transporters that play a role in the uptake of molecules from the bloodstream. These transporters transport biologics to the brain parenchyma via receptor-mediated transport. Due to the strong tight junctions between brain endothelial cells, alternative routes must be devised for delivering therapeutic proteins with high molecular weight to the brain. One route to deliver such large molecules utilizes receptor-mediated transport.
Receptor-mediated transport is an exciting route to explore for drug delivery, as it enables the transport of large molecule drugs across the blood–brain barrier. One prevalent method that is used for receptor-mediated transport is the use of antibodies against the transferrin receptor. Iron is essential to the brain's cells, so the endothelial cells contain a special mechanism to ensure iron transport across their restrictive barrier. The iron in blood serum is complexed with the iron-binding protein transferrin. Transferrin is a glycoprotein whose primary function is the transport of iron throughout the body, as iron cannot travel by itself. When the complex of iron and transferrin reaches a transferrin receptor (TfR), the transferrin with iron binds to the receptor, and endocytosis occurs, forming a vesicle that carries the bound transferrin and iron into the cell.35
One strategy used for brain delivery of high molecular weight therapeutic proteins is the molecular Trojan horse (MTH) method, which delivers therapeutic proteins into the brain via receptor-mediated endocytosis and transcytosis. The insulin receptor and the transferrin receptor are the most common receptors expressed on the luminal side of brain endothelial cells that are used for the molecular Trojan horse method.36 In this method, a therapeutic protein drug is fused to an antibody that binds to a specific receptor on the endothelial cells of the BBB. This approach enables the receptor-mediated delivery of the fusion protein across the restrictive BBB and delivers the therapeutic protein to the brain.37 In this model, the presence of the transferrin receptor was confirmed with immunostaining on the 2.5D half pipe, as seen in Fig. 4c. This shows promise that this model can be used as an in vitro screening tool for therapeutic strategies that operate via the molecular Trojan horse method to deliver large molecule therapeutics.
The final transporter assessed in this model was low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 (LRP1). Similar to the drug delivery approach utilizing the transferrin receptor, delivery approaches involving LRP1 also rely on receptor-mediated transcytosis, taking advantage of the highly expressed endogenous receptors and mechanisms present at the endothelial cells of brain capillaries. Due to the extensive capillary network and perfusion rate within the brain, using transporters for receptor-mediated transport is considered one of the most effective methods to deliver therapeutic drugs to the brain parenchyma and is recognized as one of the methods with the most likely chance of success.38
There are several receptors in the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) family; however, LRP1 is the most studied receptor within this family due to its critical role in multiple pathways in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's Disease.39 Within the last decade, evidence has emerged that suggests that LRP1 is involved in regulating the brain and systemic clearance of Alzheimer's disease amyloid β-peptide (Aβ) via transcytosis through the brain endothelium for systemic elimination, and it has been suggested that impairment of LRP1 contributes to the accumulation of amyloid-β and drives Alzheimer's disease pathology. LRP1 has roles in both the generation and clearance of amyloid-β; the endocytosis of amyloid precursor protein (mediated by LRP1) is necessary for the generation of amyloid-β within the cells; however, LRP1 is also involved in the clearance of extracellular amyloid-β.40
In addition to being involved in the pathology of Alzheimer's, understanding LRP1 and its transport mechanism is also of interest for other pathologies, such as brain tumors like glioblastoma. Glioblastoma is extremely difficult to treat, one reason being the presence of restrictive barriers such as the blood–brain barrier and the blood–brain tumor barrier, thus underscoring the need for drug delivery strategies. LRP1 is widely expressed in the BBB, as well as in glioblastoma. One of the ligands that LRP1 interacts with, receptor-associated protein (RAP), can bind to LRP1 and internalize into the endothelial cells with these receptors via receptor-mediated transport. Additionally, receptor-associated protein has been shown to cross the BBB more efficiently than transferrin, demonstrating promise as an effective brain delivery tool.41 The presence of LRP1 in this hydrogel model, seen in Fig. 4d, demonstrates that this in vitro model can be used as a screening tool to study drug delivery approaches and pathologies associated with the LRP1 transporter. Altogether, the 2.5D static culture model demonstrates presence of BBB transport proteins (Fig. 4, ESI Fig. 3 and video 1†), and therefore allows for further high throughput investigation of transport proteins that are essential to the function of the BBB.
Currently, transwell or Boyden chamber assays such as transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER) and molecular tracer permeability are used for assessing endothelial barrier functionality.43–48 However, these models rely on monolayer culture systems, or possess cells in different compartments rather than interacting directly with one another, lack real time tracking of barrier integrity, and most importantly they do not account for shear stress on the barrier function.49–53 We have previously established the use of 3D bioprinting to fabricate models that possess a cell barrier to elucidate vascular permeability for ultrasound-assisted delivery of therapeutics.24 This technology allows real time evaluation of a cell barrier, allows cells to interact with one another to resemble more closely that of the native environment, and can be modified to incorporate shear stress. Here, we showcase this 3D bioprinting technology for more specific applications such as the BBB. Future studies will utilize these findings described here for a BBB model that can either be a 2.5D that could eventually be modified for the incorporation of electrodes to further investigate BBB mechanisms or a 3D perfusable platform to investigate shear stress and the impact of a perfusable microenvironment on drug delivery to the BBB. Overall, these models show exciting promise as platforms that could be used in the late stages of drug discovery or the early stages of preclinical drug development for assessing the ability of compounds to traverse the BBB in treating neurological conditions.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d4bm00663a |
| ‡ These authors contributed to the work equally. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |