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There are currently hundreds of thousands of people on transplant lists, waiting for critical organs like kidneys, hearts, and livers that could save their lives. Unfortunately, there arent nearly enough donor organs available to fill that demand. What if instead of waiting, we could create brand-new, customized organs from scratch? Thats the idea behind bioprinting, a branch of regenerative medicine currently under development. Were not able to print complex organs just yet, but simpler tissues including blood vessels and tubes responsible for nutrient and waste exchange are already in our grasp. Bioprinting is a biological cousin of 3-D printing, a technique that deposits layers of material on top of each other to construct a three-dimensional object one slice at a time. Instead of starting with metal, plastic, or ceramic, a 3-D printer for organs and tissues uses bioink: a printable material that contains living cells. The bulk of many bioinks are water-rich molecul