Open Access
Open access
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, volume 23, issue 17, pages 9823

Theoretical and Experimental Assay of Shock Experienced by Yeast Cells during Laser Bioprinting

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-08-29
scimago Q1
SJR1.179
CiteScore8.1
Impact factor4.9
ISSN16616596, 14220067
PubMed ID:  36077218
Catalysis
Organic Chemistry
Inorganic Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Computer Science Applications
Spectroscopy
Molecular Biology
General Medicine
Abstract

Laser-induced forward transfer (LIFT) is a useful technique for bioprinting using gel-embedded cells. However, little is known about the stresses experienced by cells during LIFT. This paper theoretically and experimentally explores the levels of laser pulse irradiation and pulsed heating experienced by yeast cells during LIFT. It has been found that only 5% of the cells in the gel layer adjacent to the absorbing Ti film should be significantly heated for fractions of microseconds, which was confirmed by the fact that a corresponding population of cells died during LIFT. This was accompanied by the near-complete dimming of intracellular green fluorescent protein, also observed in response to heat shock. It is shown that microorganisms in the gel layer experience laser irradiation with an energy density of ~0.1–6 J/cm2. This level of irradiation had no effect on yeast on its own. We conclude that in a wide range of laser fluences, bioprinting kills only a minority of the cell population. Importantly, we detected a previously unobserved change in membrane permeability in viable cells. Our data provide a wider perspective on the effects of LIFT-based bioprinting on living organisms and might provide new uses for the procedure based on its effects on cell permeability.

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