PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

Development of open-source in situ photocrosslinking printhead attachments for extrusion bioprinting of hydrogel matrices

Weekes A, Stevenson M, et al.

Bioprinting

Queensland University of Technology

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study presents an open-source, modular in situ photocrosslinking system (“ISX-Linker”) designed as clip-on printhead attachments for the commercially available CELLINK BioX extrusion bioprinter, enabling targeted 405 nm LED exposure during extrusion to improve print fidelity of low-viscosity photocrosslinkable hydrogels. Two attachment variants were developed to fit both standard pneumatic and temperature-controlled BioX printheads, with adjustable dual-LED alignment and an external control unit; optical performance was validated via ANSYS Speos simulations correlated to measured irradiance at the nozzle outlet. Using exemplar bioinks (10% GelMA + 0.25% LAP; and PEGDA/alginate + LAP), photorheology and printability testing showed that increasing in situ irradiance (30–90 mW/cm2) improved crosshatch shape fidelity and printability, particularly for GelMA. The platform supported cell-laden printing with human MSCs, maintaining high day-1 viability (generally >80%) across practical irradiance conditions while enabling stiffness tunability through selection of in situ intensity and optional post-crosslinking. Overall, the work provides a broadly accessible, customizable in situ photocrosslinking approach for extrusion bioprinting of hydrogel matrices that improves construct stability and fidelity without requiring rheology modifiers.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MicroTester

Mechanical characterization of in situ photocrosslinked GelMA fibres was performed using a CellScale MicroTester G2 to quantify hydrogel stiffness as a function of in situ LED intensity and optional post-crosslinking. Single-line GelMA fibres were printed onto glass slides and immediately compressed to 20% of their original height using a rigid tungsten microbeam and a 4 mm square flat stainless-steel compression plate. Force–displacement data were captured with the MicroTester’s camera-assisted displacement tracking, and Young’s modulus was estimated by fitting the experimental response to a Hertzian contact-based model (with fibre geometry and Poisson’s ratio assumptions) to compare stiffness across crosslinking conditions.
AUTHORS

Angus Weekes, Michael Stevenson, Penelope De Gavelle De Roany, Jingyi Wen, Jordan W. Davern, Travis J. Klein.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Bioprinting

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Queensland University of Technology

COUNTRIES

Australia

INSTRUMENT USED

MicroTester

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingMicro-Mechanical Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

3D Bioprinting & Bioink Materials TestingHydrogel Mechanical TestingStem Cell Mechanobiology

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