Table 2.
Bio-ink Material |
Description | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alginate | Natural negatively charged polysaccharides from brown algae |
|
|
[14,35,36,37] |
Agarose | Polysaccharide obtained from seaweed | High cell viability | Poor support and limited cell growth | [35,38] |
Collagen | Structural protein in the extracellular matrix | Easily obtainable from skin and connective tissues of organisms Relatively strong 3D structures |
|
[39,40] |
Nanocellulose | Cellulose that can be derived from biomass, bacteria, and marine sources |
|
May not be an accurate model for human cells as we do not produce cellulase to be biodegraded | [41] |
PEGDA | Synthetic polymer used for hydrogel fabrication and UV curing |
|
Material can be brittle and rigid | [42] |
Pluronic® | Synthetic polymer-poloxamer |
|
Biocompatibility is not sufficient for long-term cell survival | [43,44] |
Note: More information is provided in Table 2 in reference [13].