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Journal ArticleDOI

Extracellular matrix-based materials for regenerative medicine

TLDR
Challenges and opportunities of ECM biomaterials are investigated for the design of organotypic models to study disease progression, for the ex vivo creation of engineered tissue and for the clinical translation of functional tissue reconstruction strategies in vivo.
Abstract
In tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, a biomaterial provides mechanical support and biochemical signals to encourage cell attachment and modulate cell behaviour. Nature’s template for a biomaterial is the extracellular matrix (ECM). The ECM contains intrinsic biochemical and mechanical cues that regulate cell phenotype and function in development, in homeostasis and in response to injury. The use of ECM-based materials in biomedical research has advanced from coating cell culture plates with purified ECM components to the design of ECM-mimicking biomaterials and the engineering of decellularized tissues aimed at recapitulating the dynamics, composition and structure of the ECM. In this Review, we highlight important matrix properties and functions in the context of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, consider techniques such as proteomics for the investigation of matrix structure and composition and discuss different engineering strategies for the design of matrix-mimicking biomaterials. Tissue, whole organ and cell culture decellularization approaches are examined for their potential to preserve the tissue-specific biochemical composition and ultrastructure of the ECM and for the development of biomaterials that promote the formation of functional tissues in clinical applications. Finally, we investigate challenges and opportunities of ECM biomaterials for the design of organotypic models to study disease progression, for the ex vivo creation of engineered tissue and for the clinical translation of functional tissue reconstruction strategies in vivo. The extracellular matrix is nature’s template for an ideal biomaterial to guide tissue homeostasis and repair. In this Review, matrix-mimicking biomaterials and decellularized matrices are discussed for their potential to reconstruct and repair tissues in vitro and in vivo.

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Electrospinning and Electrospun Nanofibers: Methods, Materials, and Applications

TL;DR: This work aims to provide a comprehensive overview of electrospun nanofibers, including the principle, methods, materials, and applications, and highlights the most relevant and recent advances related to the applications by focusing on the most representative examples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Engineering nanocellulose hydrogels for biomedical applications

TL;DR: A critically review of nanocellulose hydrogels for biomedical applications, finding that cellulose crosslinking to peptides and proteins enables a new generation of low cost and renewable smart materials used in diagnostics.
Journal ArticleDOI

3D Extracellular Matrix Mimics: Fundamental Concepts and Role of Materials Chemistry to Influence Stem Cell Fate

TL;DR: This review will present the fundamentals of ECM, cover the chemical and structural features of the scaffolds used to generate ECM mimics, discuss the nature of the signaling biomolecules required and exploited to generate bioresponsive cell microenvironments able to induce a specific cell fate, and highlights the syn-thetic strategies involved to create functional 3D ECm mimics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conductive Biomaterials as Bioactive Wound Dressing for Wound Healing and Skin Tissue Engineering.

TL;DR: In this paper, the design and fabrication methods of conductive biomaterials with various structural forms including film, nanofiber, membrane, hydrogel, sponge, foam, and acellular dermal matrix were summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decellularized Extracellular Matrix-based Bioinks for Engineering Tissue- and Organ-specific Microenvironments.

TL;DR: This review aims to discuss a new paradigm of dECM-based bioinks able to recapitulate the inherent microenvironmental niche in 3D cell-printed constructs and a basic set of fundamental criteria for printing functional human tissues and organs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

3D bioprinting of tissues and organs

TL;DR: 3D bioprinting is being applied to regenerative medicine to address the need for tissues and organs suitable for transplantation and developing high-throughput 3D-bioprinted tissue models for research, drug discovery and toxicology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrogels for tissue engineering: scaffold design variables and applications.

TL;DR: Hydrogels are an appealing scaffold material because they are structurally similar to the extracellular matrix of many tissues, can often be processed under relatively mild conditions, and may be delivered in a minimally invasive manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthetic biomaterials as instructive extracellular microenvironments for morphogenesis in tissue engineering

TL;DR: Although modern synthetic biomaterials represent oversimplified mimics of natural ECMs lacking the essential natural temporal and spatial complexity, a growing symbiosis of materials engineering and cell biology may ultimately result in synthetic materials that contain the necessary signals to recapitulate developmental processes in tissue- and organ-specific differentiation and morphogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review: vitamin b deficiency and nervous disease.

TL;DR: The artificial synthesis of a number of the components of the vitamin B complex has made available pure crystalline material in large amounts for clinical research, and thus a milestone in the history of these affections has been passed.
Journal Article

The structure and function

TL;DR: This stately book is to show how the various types of animals have solved the fundamental problems of life, and how their struc-ture is to be interpreted in terms of their functions and environment.
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