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Organaut! Russians 3D Print Living Tissue In Space
Organaut is a 3D bioprinter specially designed for microgravity. Russia has become the first country to print living tissue in space.

(Organaut 3D bioprinter)
After a December 3rd cargo delivery to the International Space Station (ISS), cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko completed an experiment with the machine in the Russian sector of the station, successfully producing human cartilage tissue and a rodent thyroid gland. The Organaut was designed via a collaboration with the printer’s maker, 3D Bioprinting Solutions, and Russia’s national space agency, Roscosmos. The United States also has its own bioprinting mission scheduled for the first half of 2019, joining in the march to develop biological solutions for problems that space is well suited to solve.
A 3D bioprinter operates by creating one layer at a time of specified tissue or stem cell material arranged as needed to grow and form as biologically programmed to do...
(Via Teslarati.)
Producing organs for human transplantation was discussed by science fiction writer Larry Niven in his 1968 novel A Gift from Earth:
...For a while your colonists will have to come up to the Hospital to get treatment with the ramrobot symbiots, but eventually we can build culture tanks in Gamma and Delta and Eta."
(Read more about Larry Niven's artificially grown organs)
Scroll down for more stories in the same category. (Story submitted 12/27/2018)
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