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915025

Sigma-Aldrich

TissueFab® bioink Bone

UV/365 nm

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Synonym(s):
3D Bioprinting, Bioink, GelMA, TissueFab
UNSPSC Code:
12352201
NACRES:
NA.23

description

0.2 μm sterile filtered
suitable for 3D bioprinting applications

Quality Level

form

gel form (viscous)

impurities

≤5 CFU/g Bioburden (Fungal)
≤5 CFU/g Bioburden (Total Aerobic)

color

white

pH

6.5-7.5

application(s)

3D bioprinting

storage temp.

2-8°C

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Application

TissueFab®- GelMA-Bone-UV bioink is designed for promoting osteogenic differentiation of stem cells. It is based on Gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) - Hydroxyapatite (HAp) hydrogel system. HAp is a highly crystalline form of calcium phosphate. HAp has a chemical similarity with the mineralized phase of bone which accounts for their excellent biocompatibility and osteoinductive and osteoconductive properties favorable for bone regeneration. HAp-containing hydrogels has been studied in literature to demonstrate their processability with different additive manufacturing approaches. Printing of cell laden structures with HAp containing bioink formulations have shown superior osteogenic properties.

Legal Information

TISSUEFAB is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany

WGK

WGK 3

Regulatory Information

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Nano hydroxyapatite particles promote osteogenesis in a three-dimensional bio-printing construct consisting of alginate/gelatin/hASCs
Wang X F et al.
Royal Society of Chemistry Advances, 6, 6832-6842 (2016)
Tunable hydrogel composite with two-step processing in combination with innovative hardware upgrade for cell-based threedimensional bioprinting.
Wust S. et al.
Acta Biomaterialia, 10, 630-640 (2014)
Yicong Zuo et al.
ACS applied materials & interfaces, 7(19), 10386-10394 (2015-05-01)
Modular tissue engineering holds great potential in regenerating natural complex tissues by engineering three-dimensional modular scaffolds with predefined geometry and biological characters. In modular tissue-like construction, a scaffold with an appropriate mechanical rigidity for assembling fabrication and high biocompatibility for
Xi Chen et al.
International journal of nanomedicine, 11, 4707-4718 (2016-10-04)
Periodontitis is a chronic infectious disease and is the major cause of tooth loss and other oral health issues around the world. Periodontal tissue regeneration has therefore always been the ultimate goal of dentists and researchers. Existing fabrication methods mainly
Michal Bartnikowski et al.
Materials (Basel, Switzerland), 9(4) (2016-04-14)
The concept of biphasic or multi-layered compound scaffolds has been explored within numerous studies in the context of cartilage and osteochondral regeneration. To date, no system has been identified that stands out in terms of superior chondrogenesis, osteogenesis or the

Articles

Bioinks enable 3D bioprinting of tissue constructs for drug screening and transplantation; select suitable bioinks for specific tissue engineering.

Learn how 3D bioprinting is revolutionizing drug discovery with highly-controllable cell co-culture, printable biomaterials, and its potential to simulate tissues and organs. This review paper also compares 3D bioprinting to other advanced biomimetic techniques such as organoids and organ chips.

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