Irish Researchers Advance Bioprinting of Functional Heart Tissue

On January 24, 2025, a team from the University of Galway in Ireland unveiled a groundbreaking technique in bioprinting, aimed at creating functional human heart tissue. This innovation could reshape the landscape of regenerative medicine, disease modeling, and drug screening.

The researchers focused on replicating heart tissues that dynamically change shape, mimicking the natural processes occurring during organ development. Their findings, published in Advanced Functional Materials, highlight a novel bioprinting method that incorporates cell-generated forces to drive shape-morphing in tissues.

Lead author Ankita Pramanick explained, "Our work introduces a novel platform, using embedded bioprinting to bioprint tissues that undergo programmable and predictable 4D shape-morphing driven by cell-generated forces." This advancement allows bioprinted heart tissues to contract more effectively, enhancing their structural and functional maturity.

Traditional bioprinting methods often fail to account for the critical shape changes that occur during embryonic development. The University of Galway team’s approach enables the creation of heart tissues that not only resemble their biological counterparts but also exhibit improved contractile properties.

Professor Andrew Daly, the principal investigator, noted, "By allowing bioprinted heart tissues to undergo shape-morphing, they start to beat stronger and faster." This capability addresses a significant challenge in the field, paving the way for more advanced bioprinted tissues that better replicate adult human heart structure.

Despite this progress, the team acknowledges that fully functional bioprinted organs suitable for human implantation remain a distant goal. Future research will focus on scaling their bioprinting techniques to create larger constructs and integrating blood vessels to sustain these tissues in laboratory conditions.

This breakthrough represents a crucial step towards generating functional bioprinted organs, with extensive implications for cardiovascular medicine and beyond.

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