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American Journal of Computer Science and Information Technology

ISSN: 2349-3917

E u r o s c i c o n C o n f e r e n c e o n

3D Printing and Wireless

Technology

S e p t e m b e r 1 7 - 1 8 , 2 0 1 8

L i s b o n , P o r t u g a l

Wireless and Printing Technology 2018

T

he development of biosourced materials compatible with 3D printing holds

promise for innovative biomaterials and addresses both medical and

environmental matters. Our study aimed at assessing the potential of pure

marine collagen formats from a fishing industry byproduct as a matrix for bioink

formulation. Both native and denatured formats of fish skin collagen were

studied as candidates for 3D printing of an organ shaped construct. Hydrogels

were prepared and their rheological properties assessed. They were printed

using a simple mechanical extrusion 3D printer at low temperature to prevent the

denaturation of the native collagen. Proof of concept was successfully obtained

and a short overview of the opportunity of complementary crosslinking of the

hydrogels unlocked new perspectives for the development of bioinks.

Biography

Mathieu Loste Berdot has completed his Engineering Degree

in Polysaccharides and Biomaterials Science from the

International School of Paper, Print Media and Biomaterials of

Grenoble National Polytechnic Institute and received a Double

Degree in Chemical Engineering from KTH Royal Institute of

Technology, Stockholm. He is a PhD student working with

the University Grenoble Alpes Institute and the New Zealand

Institute for Plant and Food Research Ltd on the development

of a marine collagen scaffold cross-linked with nano cellulose

for 3D printing and tissue engineering.

mathieu.loste-berdot@lgp2.grenoble-inp.fr

Development of a marine collagen hydrogel for 3D printing

Mathieu Loste Berdot

1, 2

, Kathleen Hofman

1

Aurore Denneulin

2

,

Davide Beneventi

3

, Julien Bras

2

and Deborah Le Corre Bordes

1

1

New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Ltd, New Zealand

2

Grenoble Institute of Technology, France

3

Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), France

Mathieu Loste Berdot et al., Am J Compt Sci Inform Technol 2018 Volume: 6

DOI: 10.21767/2349-3917-C2-005