“…The resultant mesh of nanofibers can be removed from the mandrel, producing a mesh-tube (Rocco et al, 2014), with examples producing contiguous tubular structures that are compatible with cell-seeding (Figure 4). In many cases these meshes are combined with secondary electrospinning, deposition, or casting techniques to change Seliktar et al, 2003;Matsuda, 2004;Opitz et al, 2004;Swartz et al, 2005;Liu et al, 2007;Nieponice et al, 2008;Ma et al, 2010;Wang et al, 2014;Guo et al, 2017;Atchison et al, 2017;Strobel et al, 2018b;Im et al, 2019Intestine Yu et al, 2012Zakhem et al, 2012;Chen et al, 2015;Zhou et al, 2018;Ladd et al, 2018Ladd et al, , 2019Roh et al, 2019Trachea Naito et al, 2011 • High degree of control over scaffold properties (porosity, mechanics, etc. ) • Easily applied for tube formation • Directly compatible with proteins…”