Discovery and Basic Research
Category: Poster Abstract
Sophia Boiani, BS
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Kalindu Perera, BS, MS
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Alexandra Vasta
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Katherine Messenger
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Sabrina Delva
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Jyothi U. Menon, Ph.D.
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Microwell arrays (12x12 arrays of wells of 800 um diameter) imaged below (i) and above (ii) the formulation's LCST of 36.8°C. Note the change in size as a result of the hydrogel's thermoresponsive swelling/shrinking. These arrays may be used for high-throughput culture of cell spheroids for a variety of screening applications.
Images of miniature human kidney (i) and heart (ii; without pulmonary vasculature) printed with our optimized formulation, demonstrating its versatility for printing custom-shaped drug delivery implants or other devices.
Contact angle studies showing the thermoresponsive hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity of our formulation: images below (i) and above (ii) the formulation's LCST of 36.8°C, and graphical representation of the same (iii; n=3).