Multi-Functional Printable Silk Inks Tap Common Print Technology to Address Therapeutics, Regenerative Medicine, Bio-Sensing Needs
Silk inks containing enzymes, antibiotics, antibodies, nanoparticles and growth factors could turn inkjet printing into a new, more effective tool for therapeutics, regenerative medicine and biosensing, according to new research led by Tufts University biomedical engineers and published June 16 in the journal Advanced Materials online in advance of print.
Inkjet printing is one of the most immediate and accessible forms of printing technology currently available, according to the researchers, and ink-jet printing of biomolecules has been previously proposed by scientists. However, the heat-sensitive nature of these unstable compounds means printed materials rapidly lose functionality, limiting their use.
Enter purified silk protein, or fibroin, which offers intrinsic strength and protective properties that make it well-suited for a range of biomedical and optoelectronic applications. This natural polymer is an ideal “cocoon” that can stabilize compounds such as enzymes, antibodies and growth factors while lending itself to many different mechanically robust formats, said Fiorenzo Omenetto, Ph.D., senior author on the paper and associate dean for research and Frank C. Doble Professor of Engineering at Tufts School of Engineering.
“We thought that if we were able to develop an inkjet-printable silk solution, we would have a universal building block to generate multiple functional printed formats that could lead to a wide variety of applications in which inks remain active over time,” he said.
By using this simple approach and starting with the same base material, the research team created and tested a “custom library” of inkjet-printable, functional silk inks doped with a variety of components:
Bacterial-sensing polydiacetylenes (PDAs) printed on surgical gloves; the word “contaminated” printed on the glove changed from blue to red after exposure to E. coli
Proteins that stimulate bone growth (BMP-2) printed on a plastic dish to test topographical control of directed tissue growth
Sodium ampicillin printed on a bacterial culture to test the effectiveness of a topographical distribution of the antibiotic
Gold nanoparticles printed on paper, for possible application in photonics and biology (e.g., color engineering, surface plasmon resonance based sensing and bio-imaging)
Enzymes printed on paper to test the ability of the ink to entrain small functional biomolecules
The researchers, who included collaborators from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, foresee wide potential for future investigation and application of this technology.
For example, Omenetto envisions more work on the bio-sensing gloves, which he says could selectively react to different pathological agents. The ability to print antibiotics in topographical patterns could address the need for “smart” bandages, where therapeutics are incorporated and delivered to match a complex injury.
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