Despite the tremendous technical advancements in 3D bioprinting, the concept of fabricating 3D structures and functional tissues directly in live animals remains a visionary challenge. We show that 3D cell-laden hydrogels can be efficiently bioprinted across tissues and within tissues of living animals.We developed photo-sensitive polymers that allow in vitro and in vivo fabrication of hydrogels into pre-existing structures, by bio-orthogonal two-photon cycloaddition and crosslinking at wavelengths longer than 850 nm, without byproducts. By this technique, that we name intravital 3D bioprinting, after injection of these polymers in vivo it is possible to fabricate complex 3D structures inside tissues of living mice, including the dermis across epidermis, the skeletal muscle across epimysium or the brain across meninges. The use of commonly available multi-photon microscopes allows accurate (XYZ) positioning and orientation of bioprinted structures into specific anatomical sites. Finally, we show that intravital 3D bioprinting of donor muscle-derived stem cells allows de novo formation of myofibers in host animals. We envision that this strategy will offer an alternative in vivo approach to conventional bioprinting technology, holding great promises to substantially change the paradigm of 3D bioprinting for pre-clinical and clinical use.
We have previously shown that clusters of guanine quadruplex (G4) structures can form in the human herpes simplex-1 (HSV-1) genome. Here we used immunofluorescence and immune-electron microscopy with a G4-specific monoclonal antibody to visualize G4 structures in HSV-1 infected cells. We found that G4 formation and localization within the cells was virus cycle dependent: viral G4s peaked at the time of viral DNA replication in the cell nucleus, moved to the nuclear membrane at the time of virus nuclear egress and were later found in HSV-1 immature virions released from the cell nucleus. Colocalization of G4s with ICP8, a viral DNA processing protein, was observed in viral replication compartments. G4s were lost upon treatment with DNAse and inhibitors of HSV-1 DNA replication. The notable increase in G4s upon HSV-1 infection suggests a key role of these structures in the HSV-1 biology and indicates new targets to control both the lytic and latent infection.
Skeletal muscle decellularization allows the generation of natural scaffolds that retain the extracellular matrix (ECM) mechanical integrity, biological activity, and three-dimensional (3D) architecture of the native tissue. Recent reports showed that in vivo implantation of decellularized muscles supports muscle regeneration in volumetric muscle loss models,
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