In the absence of perfusable vascular networks, three-dimensional (3D)
engineered tissues densely populated with cells quickly develop a
necrotic core
1. Yet the lack of a general approach to rapidly construct such networks remains a major challenge for 3D tissue culture
2, 3, 4.
Here, we printed rigid 3D filament networks of carbohydrate glass, and
used them as a cytocompatible sacrificial template in engineered tissues
containing living cells to generate cylindrical networks that could be
lined with endothelial cells and perfused with blood under high-pressure
pulsatile flow. Because this simple vascular casting approach allows
independent control of network geometry, endothelialization and
extravascular tissue, it is compatible with a wide variety of cell
types, synthetic and natural extracellular matrices, and crosslinking
strategies. We also demonstrated that the perfused vascular channels
sustained the metabolic function of primary rat hepatocytes in
engineered tissue constructs that otherwise exhibited suppressed
function in their core.