Designing Microgels for Cell Culture and Controlled Assembly of Tissue Microenvironments

Adv Funct Mater. 2020 Sep 10;30(37):1907670. doi: 10.1002/adfm.201907670. Epub 2019 Dec 17.

Abstract

Micron-sized hydrogels, termed microgels, are emerging as multifunctional platforms that can recapitulate tissue heterogeneity in engineered cell microenvironments. The microgels can function as either individual cell culture units or can be assembled into larger scaffolds. In this manner, individual microgels can be customized for single or multi-cell co-culture applications, or heterogeneous populations can be used as building blocks to create microporous assembled scaffolds that more closely mimic tissue heterogeneities. The inherent versatility of these materials allows user-defined control of the microenvironments, from the order of singly encapsulated cells to entire three-dimensional cell scaffolds. These hydrogel scaffolds are promising for moving towards personalized medicine approaches and recapitulating the multifaceted microenvironments that exist in vivo.

Keywords: Assembled networks; Cell culture; Hydrogels; Microgels; Tissue regeneration.