Designing biomaterials for tissue engineering based on the deconstruction of the native cellular environment

last updated: 2015-03-19
TitleDesigning biomaterials for tissue engineering based on the deconstruction of the native cellular environment
Publication TypePapers in Scientific Journals
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsMano J. F.
Abstract

Strategies in Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine are often based on the use of biomaterials able to support and control cellular activity. Two aspects should be considered in the development of high performance bioinstructive biomaterials. (i) The inherent complexity associated with the multiple possibilities in the biomaterials/cells selection, usually addressed using high-throughput combinatorial tests; and (ii) the unpredictability of the biological outcome of a particular solution. The last facet requires a rational decomposition of the main spatial and temporal cues at the cellular level that drive new-tissue formation upon injury, to be then transposed into adequate biomaterials’ design. Several nano/micro-technologies may be used to process biomaterials with different shapes and sizes, permitting to engineer biomimetic and hierarchical biomedical devices. As a particular case study, the layer-by-layer assembly method is suggested as a versatile and robust framework to formulate multifunctional and tunable polymer-based biomaterials able to address this exercise of deconstruction and reconstruction.

JournalMaterials Letters
Volume141
Pagination198-202
Date Published2015-02-15
PublisherElsevier
DOI10.1016/j.matlet.2014.11.061
URLhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167577X14020497
KeywordsBiomaterials, Biomimetics, nanobiomaterials, processing, regenerative medicine, Stem cell niche
RightsopenAccess
Peer reviewedyes
Statuspublished

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