DNA glue holds together this 3-D printed gel, a precursor step to building tissues. |
DNA molecules provide the "source code" for life in humans, plants,
animals and some microbes. But now researchers report an initial study
showing that the strands can also act as a glue to hold together
3-D-printed materials that could someday be used to grow tissues and
organs in the lab. This first-of-its-kind demonstration of the
inexpensive process is described in the brand-new journal ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering.
Andrew Ellington and colleagues explain that although researchers
have used nucleic acids such as DNA to assemble objects, most of these
are nano-sized -- so tiny that humans can't see them with the naked eye.
Making them into larger, visible objects is cost-prohibitive. Current
methods also do not allow for much control or flexibility in the types
of materials that are created. Overcoming these challenges could
potentially have a big payoff -- the ability to make tissues to repair
injuries or even to create organs for the thousands of patients in need
of organ transplants. With this in mind, Ellington's group set out to
create a larger, more affordable material held together with DNA.
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