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Journal ArticleDOI

Designed protein- and peptide-based hydrogels for biomedical sciences

TLDR
A review of protein-and peptide-based hydrogels can be found in this paper, where the authors discuss the potential of using protein or peptide based hydrogel in the field of biomedical sciences.
Abstract
Proteins are fundamentally the most important macromolecules for biochemical, mechanical, and structural functions in living organisms. Therefore, they provide us with diverse structural building blocks for constructing various types of biomaterials, including an important class of such materials, hydrogels. Since natural peptides and proteins are biocompatible and biodegradable, they have features advantageous for their use as the building blocks of hydrogels for biomedical applications. They display constitutional and mechanical similarities with the native extracellular matrix (ECM), and can be easily bio-functionalized via genetic and chemical engineering with features such as bio-recognition, specific stimulus-reactivity, and controlled degradation. This review aims to give an overview of hydrogels made up of recombinant proteins or synthetic peptides as the structural elements building the polymer network. A wide variety of hydrogels composed of protein or peptide building blocks with different origins and compositions – including β-hairpin peptides, α-helical coiled coil peptides, elastin-like peptides, silk fibroin, and resilin – have been designed to date. In this review, the structures and characteristics of these natural proteins and peptides, with each of their gelation mechanisms, and the physical, chemical, and mechanical properties as well as biocompatibility of the resulting hydrogels are described. In addition, this review discusses the potential of using protein- or peptide-based hydrogels in the field of biomedical sciences, especially tissue engineering.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Novel Trends in Hydrogel Development for Biomedical Applications: A Review

TL;DR: The main purpose of this review article was to summarize the most recent trends of hydrogel technology, going through the most used polymeric materials and the most popularHydrogel synthesis methods in recent years, including different strategies of enhancing hydrogels’ properties, such as cross-linking and the manufacture of composite hydrogELs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review on Recent Advances of Protein-Polymer Hydrogels

TL;DR: Protein-polymer hydrogels have gained significant progress in various fields, such as tissue engineering, drug delivery and encapsulation, wearable sensors, adsorption, and other applications as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review on recent advances of Protein-Polymer hydrogels

TL;DR: Protein-polymer hydrogels have gained significant progress in various fields, such as tissue engineering, drug delivery and encapsulation, wearable sensors, adsorption, and other applications as mentioned in this paper .
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart Hydrogels Meet Carbon Nanomaterials for New Frontiers in Medicine.

TL;DR: Carbon nanomaterials include diverse structures and morphologies, such as fullerenes, nano-onions, nanodots, Nanodiamonds, nanohorns, nanotubes, and graphene-based materials as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthetic biology as driver for the biologization of materials sciences.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify and review two main directions by which synthetic biology can be harnessed to provide new impulses for the biologization of the materials sciences: first, the engineering of cells to produce precursors for the subsequent synthesis of materials, and second, engineered living materials that are formed or assembled by cells or in which cells contribute specific functions while remaining an integral part of the living composite material.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A novel method for synthetic vaccine construction based on protein assembly

TL;DR: This work optimized and employed the recently developed SpyTag/SpyCatcher technique to establish a protein assembly system for vaccine generation from pre-prepared subunit proteins, and demonstrated that a new vaccine generated in this way does not hamper the individual function of different vaccine components and is efficient in inducing both T and B cell responses.
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Immunomodulatory injectable silk hydrogels maintaining functional islets and promoting anti-inflammatory M2 macrophage polarization.

TL;DR: In vitro biological results reveal that the blended hydrogels provide an ideal 3D matrix for primary rat islets and the immuno-informed hydrogel demonstrates local modulation of inflammatory responses in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photochemical Cross-Linking for Collagen-Based Scaffolds: A Study on Optical Properties, Mechanical Properties, Stability, and Hematocompatibility

TL;DR: Photochemical cross-linking reduced platelet adhesion and abolished fibrin mesh formation, thereby improving the hematocompatibility of collagen structures and suggesting the feasibility of using the photochemically cross-linked collagen structures for orthopedic and vascular tissue engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silk: molecular organization and control of assembly.

TL;DR: The biological processes involved in polymer synthesis and assembly can offer important information on fundamental interactions involved in the formation of complex material architectures, as well as practical knowledge into new and important materials related to biomaterial uses and tissue engineering needs.
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LCST Behavior is Manifested in a Single Molecule: Elastin-Like polypeptide (VPGVG)n

TL;DR: Simulation of the physical origin of the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) behavior of elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) finds evidence for properties changes associated with LCST behavior in a single molecule by performing long atomic-level molecular dynamics simulation on the ELP sequences for four different length peptides over a wide range of temperatures.
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What is the common protein based hydrogel for biomedical implants?

The common protein-based hydrogel for biomedical implants is not specified in the provided information.

What to choose as a standard protein based hydrogel in biomedical implants?

There is no specific recommendation for a standard protein-based hydrogel for biomedical implants in the provided information.