Technion Inaugurates Center for 3D Printing Living Tissue

March 28, 2019

An innovative center for the printing of cells, tissues, and organs has been established in the Faculty of Biomedical Engineering at the Technion.

Professor Shulamit Levenberg, who heads the center, said at the event that “the new center is open to all Technion researchers and will guide the Technion’s tissue engineering department into new areas.” Prof. Levenberg is dean of the Faculty of Biomedical Engineering, and the Stanley and Sylvia Shirvan Chair in Cancer and Life Sciences.

The field of tissue engineering has undergone dizzying progress in recent decades — and the Technion has filled a significant role in this revolution. Technion researchers are developing complex and precise artificial tissues that significantly improve their integration in the target organ. This involves, among other things, the creation of tissue containing a developed system of blood vessels that quickly connect to the patient’s blood vessels.

Click here for a video of the 3D printer at work.

The 3-D Bio-Printing Center for Cell and Biomaterials Printing will provide a significant boost to tissue engineering at the Technion. The center operates an innovative printer that prints three-dimensional scaffolds and the cells that grow into tissue. The printer translates the information obtained from the patient’s CT scans into three-dimensional tissue suited to the injury area. The system has additional tools to design scaffolds or cells to make 3D tissues, Levenberg said. “You can design as you wish and seed cells in the proper orientation to allow them to better organize into the right tissue structure.”

The printer is relevant to all areas of regenerative medicine and makes possible the printing of various tissues and the integration of controlled-release systems. It has several different printing heads, enabling the simultaneous creation of printed tissue from different. It is equipped with precise motors of variable speed and accuracy of 0.001 mm, as well as a built-in camera that improves the exactitude of the printing needle.

The system is suitable for a wide range of raw materials, such as hydrogels, thermoplastic materials, and ointments, with precise temperature and radiation control (ranging from 0 to 70 degrees Celsius and 30 to 250 degrees Celsius for ultraviolet radiation). The printing can be carried out directly into the growth plate.

For more than a century, the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology has pioneered in science and technology education and delivered world-changing impact. Proudly a global university, the Technion has long leveraged boundary-crossing collaborations to advance breakthrough research and technologies. Now with a presence in three countries, the Technion will prepare the next generation of global innovators. Technion people, ideas and inventions make immeasurable contributions to the world, innovating in fields from cancer research and sustainable energy to quantum computing and computer science to do good around the world.

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