|
UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER MAKES MADE-TO-MEASURE SKIN AND BONES A REALITY USING INKJET PRINTERS
19 January 2005 - University of Manchester
| Made-to-measure skin and bones, which could be used to treat burn victims or patients who have suffered severe disfigurements, may soon be a reality using inkjets which can print human cells. |
Scientists at The University of Manchester have developed the breakthrough technology which will allow tailor-made tissues and bones to be grown, simply by inputting their dimensions into a computer. Professor Brian Derby, Head of the Ink-Jet Printing of Human Cells Project research team, said: 'It is difficult for a surgeon to reconstruct any complex disfiguring of the face using CT scans, but with this technology we are able to build a fragment which will fit exactly. We can place cells in any designed position in order to grow tissue or bone.' This breakthrough overcomes problems currently faced by scientists who are unable to grow large tissues and have limited control over the shape or size the tissue will grow to. It also allows more than one type of cell to be printed at once, which opens up the possibility of being able to create bone grafts. 'Using conventional methods, you are only able to grow tissues which are a few millimetres thick, which is fine for growing artificial skin, but if you wanted to grow cartilage, for instance, it would be impossible,' Professor Derby says. The key to the advance which Professor Derby and his team have made is the innovative way in which they are able to pre-determine the size and shape of the tissue or bone grown. Using the printers, they are able create 3-dimensional structures, known as 'tissue scaffolds'. The shape of the scaffold determines the shape of the tissue as it grows. The structures are created by printing very thin layers of a material repeatedly on top of each other until the structure is built. Each layer is just 10 microns thick (1,000 layers equals 1cm in thickness). This method allows larger tissues to be grown than previously possible. The reason for this is the way in which the cells are inserted into the structures. Before being fed into the printer, the cells are suspended in a nutrient rich liquid not dissimilar to ink, which ensures their survival. The cells are then fed into the printer and seeded directly into the structure as it is built. This avoids any 'sticking to the surface' which is a major disadvantage of current methods that infuse the cells into the structure after it has been built. 'The problem is getting cells into the interior of these constructions as they naturally stick to the sides of whatever they are being inserted into. If they stick to the sides then this limits the number of cells which can grow into tissues, and the lack of penetration also limits their size. By using inkjet printing we are able to seed the cells into the construction as we build it, which means 'sticking' isn't a problem,' says Professor Derby. Professor Derby believes the potential for this technology is huge: 'You could print the scaffolding to create an organ in a day,' he says. The Ink-Jet Printing of Human Cells Project is partly funded by The Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (ESPRC) and carried out in conjunction with the UK Centre for Tissue Engineering. Professor Derby is Professor of Materials Science in The University of Manchester's School of Materials. Simon Hunter +44 161 275 8387 University of Manchester
http://www.man.ac.uk
About: University of Manchester
The University of Manchester has been created by bringing together The Victoria University of Manchester and UMIST, two of Britain's most distinguished universities, to create a powerful new force in British Higher Education. The new merged University has been established with an unprecedented £300m investment programme. With some of the highest quality teaching and research and the broadest spread of academic subjects, we will be able to compete with the best universities in the world. The new institution is expected to be the largest single-site university in the UK, offering students a greater choice of degree programmes and options, and even better facilities and student support services. The University of Manchester has its origins in Owens College, which was established in 1851 in Richard Cobden's house on Quay Street, Manchester. John Owens (1780 - 1846) was a Manchester textile merchant who left a bequest of £96,942 for the purpose of founding a college for the education of males on non-sectarian lines. The College moved to the first buildings on the present site on Oxford Road in 1873. The buildings around the Quadrangle, designed by Alfred Waterhouse, were completed in 1902. The College was granted a Royal Charter in April 1880 as the Victoria University, a federal institution which established colleges in Leeds and Liverpool. These Colleges were granted their independence in 1903 becoming the Universities of Leeds and Liverpool respectively, and creating the Victoria University of Manchester. The Faculties of Commerce and Theology were instituted in 1903 and added to those of Arts, Science, Law, Medicine and Music. The Faculty of Education was added in 1914. The Manchester Business School constitutes the Faculty of Business Administration and was established in 1965. The School of Biological Sciences was created in 1986 The University of Manchester has two complementary organisations which facilitate relationships with the Funding Councils and Industry and handle the commercial exploitation of the results of research: The Research and Graduate Support Unit, which inter alia provides advice and support to academic staff on research funding, and negotiates and manages research contracts and: Manchester Innovation Ltd, the University's technology development and exploitation company. It is responsible for the protection of intellectual property rights, licensing and the transfer of technology, including the establishment and management of spin-off companies. |
More News:
For January 2005
From University of Manchester
For Engineered Fabrics
|