“…Since many tissues, e.g., striated muscle, 6 cartilage, 7 or cornea 8 , to name just a few examples, have anisotropic hierarchical morphologies, there is a growing interest in developing approaches for the fabrication of anisotropic hydrogels that exhibit direction-dependent pore shape, microstructure, stiffness, and conductivity. [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21] In tissue engineering, aside from biomimicry, anisotropic pore shape and hydrogel structure, in general, are important for cell guidance 22 and differentiation, 23 as well as mass transport of biofactors and nutrients throughout the scaffold. 19,24,25 In bioseparation, control over the shape anisotropy of hydrogel pores may enhance the selectivity of the filtration of biological species and/or minimize the pressure drop across the matrix.…”