Open-source bioprinting can broaden access to biofabrication, enabling existing systems to perform high-resolution tissue manufacturing. However, most of these focus on low cost, easy assembly, or specific biomaterial ink rather than making a robust standardized and modularized multifunction platform. In this study, we present CrystalCells, a user-friendly modular open-source bioprinting system centered on the TridentExtruder, a high-performance syringe extruder with extrusion/retraction capability and tool-free automated syringe coupling. The system enables the automated exchange of syringe, temperature-controlling, microscope, and pipette modules. Repeated syringe return-and-pickup cycles showed repositioning errors within ±20 μm, while the extruder generated pressures above 950 kPa and exhibited lower elastic deformation than the Replistruder 4 under the same pressure conditions. CrystalCells supported the extrusion of pre-crosslinked alginate, FRESH printing, and dual-biomaterial inks printing with automated exchange. A microscope module resolved stained HeLa cells and enabled layer-by-layer imaging for defect detection during printing. A thermoelectric module maintained the syringe barrel below 6 °C during the printing of an alginate–collagen biomaterial ink at 23 °C (room temperature), and a pipette module transferred 2–10 μL volumes with errors within ±0.5 μL. These results show that CrystalCells is an open-source modular biofabrication platform integrating printing, imaging, temperature control, and liquid handling within a single workflow.
Liang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.