homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Mobile bioprinter promises to print new 'skin' straight onto any wound

No skin? No problem!

Alexandru Micu
February 28, 2019 @ 11:26 pm

share Share

A novel bioprinter aims to make skin grafts a thing of the past — by printing skin directly onto wounds using a patient’s own skin.

Skin.

Image via Max Pixel.

Skin-deep wounds may not sound as dangerous as much as annoying, but make no mistake: they can be debilitating. Chronic, particularly large or non-healing wounds, such as diabetic pressure ulcers, affect millions across the world. They are also very costly, as they require multiple rounds of treatment, and they can be agonizing. If that wasn’t enough, burn injuries behave in largely the same way.

Enter the Skinprinter

Researchers at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) have developed a mobile bioprinting system that can print skin directly into a wound. The printer (the first of its kind ever developed) is supplied with the patient’s cells, rolled to their bedside, and applies successive layers of (bi-layered) skin to jump-start the healing process.

“The unique aspect of this technology is the mobility of the system and the ability to provide on-site management of extensive wounds by scanning and measuring them in order to deposit the cells directly where they are needed to create skin,” said Sean Murphy, Ph.D., an assistant professor at WFIRM and the study’s lead author.

The team reports that the major building blocks of skin — dermal fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes — can easily be isolated from a sample of the patient’s uninjured tissue, and cultured to provide the raw ‘ink’. Fibroblasts are cells that synthesize the extracellular matrix and collagen (basically the skin’s structural supports) while keratinocytes are the predominant cells of the epidermis. Both types of cells play an important role in wound healing.

The ink is made up of these cells and a hydrogel substrate. A certain device embedded into the printer scans the wound, and this data is then crunched to guide the printing process. The printer can deliver a different mix of cells at any point, allowing it to simulate the layered structure of the skin. This helps accelerate the growth and formation of normal skin structure and functions, according to the team. As a proof-of-concept of the system, the team printed skin directly onto pre-clinical models.

bioprinter nozzle.

A close up view of the skin bioprinter nozzle.
Image credits WFIRM.

It’s quite an exciting system. The current go-to method for treating large skin wounds are grafts, but they can often be challenging to stretch over the whole wound. Living human skin also comes in quite a limited supply, as you might imagine. Donors are an option, but those grafts run the risk of being rejected by the host. With the WFIRM bioprinter system, the researchers report seeing new skin forming outward from the center of the wound — this only happened when the patient’s own cells were used, because the tissues were not rejected.

The team says their next step is to conduct clinical, human trials.

“The technology has the potential to eliminate the need for painful skin grafts that cause further disfigurement for patients suffering from large wounds or burns,” said WFIRM Director Anthony Atala, M.D., and a co-author of the paper. “A mobile bioprinter that can provide on-site management of extensive wounds could help to accelerate the delivery of care and decrease costs for patients.”

“If you deliver the patient’s own cells, they do actively contribute to wound healing by organizing up front to start the healing process much faster,” said James Yoo, M.D., Ph. D, who led the research team and co-authored the paper. “While there are other types of wound healing products available to treat wounds and help them close, those products don’t actually contribute directly to the creation of skin.”

The paper “In Situ Bioprinting of Autologous Skin Cells Accelerates Wound Healing of Extensive Excisional Full-Thickness Wounds” has been published in the journal Scientific Reports.

share Share

Federal Workers Say They’re Being Watched by AI for Saying Anything Bad about Trump or Musk

AI monitors federal workers for ‘anti-Trump’ and 'anti-Musk' language as oversight erodes, insiders say.

The World’s Smallest Flying Robot Is Here. It Weighs Less Than a Raindrop and It’s Powered by Invisible Forces

The world’s lightest untethered flying robot takes to the air.

Pulse Oximeters Seem To Be Misreading Oxygen in Darker Skin

Bias in pulse oximeters isn't just a clinical glitch — it’s a systemic issue that puts patients with darker skin at risk.

Birds Are Changing Color in Cities. Here’s Why

Birds in cities are getting flashier — literally.

This Is How Autocrats Quietly Take Over and What You Can Do About It

We can't rely on just the courts. Reversing political backsliding needs the people's voices.

Women With Endometriosis Say Cutting These 4 Foods Eased Their Pain

A new study reveals that eliminating foods like alcohol, gluten, and dairy may offer real relief where medicine often falls short.

Economists forecast the full impact of Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs. The US is hit the hardest

Modelling of how Trump’s tariffs will hit global trade suggests the US will be the biggest loser – while a few nations may emerge as surprising winners.

“Thirstwaves” Are Growing More Common Across the United States

Like heat waves, these periods of high atmospheric demand for water can damage crops and ecosystems and increase pressure on water resources. New research shows they’re becoming more severe.

DNA From 7,000-Year-Old Mummies Reveals Lost Society From Sahara

Two ancient mummies reveal a mysterious, isolated lineage in North Africa.

This Warrior Was Buried in Ice Under a Bone Shield for 4,000 Years and His Face Was Just Reconstructed

A neolithic warrior gets a face thanks to modern tech.