Seaweed polysaccharides as sustainable building blocks for biomaterials in tissue engineering

Author(s):  
Duarte Nuno Carvalho ◽  
Ana Rita Inácio ◽  
Rita O. Sousa ◽  
Rui L. Reis ◽  
Tiago H. Silva
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Israa Bu Najmah ◽  
Nicholas Lundquist ◽  
Melissa K. Stanfield ◽  
Filip Stojcevski ◽  
Jonathan A. Campbell ◽  
...  

An insulating composite was made from the sustainable building blocks wool, sulfur, and canola oil. In the first stage of the synthesis, inverse vulcanization was used to make a polysulfide polymer from the canola oil triglyceride and sulfur. This polymerization benefits from complete atom economy. In the second stage, the powdered polymer is mixed with wool, coating the fibers through electrostatic attraction. The polymer and wool mixture is then compressed with mild heating to provoke S-S metathesis in the polymer, which locks the wool in the polymer matrix. The wool fibers impart tensile strength, insulating properties, and flame resistance to the composite. All building blocks are sustainable or derived from waste and the composite is a promising lead on next-generation insulation for energy conservation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 550-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koji Nagahama ◽  
Naho Oyama ◽  
Kimika Ono ◽  
Atsushi Hotta ◽  
Keiko Kawauchi ◽  
...  

Nanocomposite injectable gels, which self-replenish regenerative extracellular microenvironments within the gels in the body by utilizing host-derived bioactive molecules as building blocks, are reported.


Author(s):  
Weiguo Qiu ◽  
Joseph Cappello ◽  
Xiaoyi Wu

Micro- and submicro-diameter protein fibers are fundamental building blocks of extra- and intra-cellular matrices, providing structural support, stability and protection to cells, tissues and organism [1]. Fabricating performance fibers of both naturally derived and genetically engineered proteins has been extensively pursued for a variety of biomedical applications, including tissue engineering and drug delivery [2]. Silk-elastin-like proteins (SELPs), consisting of tandemly repeated polypeptide sequences derived from silk and elastin, have been biosynthesized using recombinant DNA technique [3]. Their potential as a biomaterials in the form of hydrogels continues to be explored [4, 5]. This study will focus on the fabrication of robust, micro-diameter SELP fibers as biomaterials for tissue engineering applications.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 204173141774415 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Kessler ◽  
Sandra Gehrke ◽  
Marc Winnefeld ◽  
Birgit Huber ◽  
Eva Hoch ◽  
...  

In vitro–generated soft tissue could provide alternate therapies for soft tissue defects. The aim of this study was to evaluate methacrylated gelatin/hyaluronan as scaffolds for soft tissue engineering and their interaction with human adipose–derived stem cells (hASCs). ASCs were incorporated into methacrylated gelatin/hyaluronan hydrogels. The gels were photocrosslinked with a lithium phenyl-2,4,6-trimethylbenzoylphosphinate photoinitiator and analyzed for cell viability and adipogenic differentiation of ASCs over a period of 30 days. Additionally, an angiogenesis assay was performed to assess their angiogenic potential. After 24 h, ASCs showed increased viability on composite hydrogels. These results were consistent over 21 days of culture. By induction of adipogenic differentiation, the mature adipocytes were observed after 7 days of culture, their number significantly increased until day 28 as well as expression of fatty acid binding protein 4 and adiponectin. Our scaffolds are promising as building blocks for adipose tissue engineering and allowed long viability, proliferation, and differentiation of ASCs.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
James D. Tang ◽  
Cameron Mura ◽  
Kyle J. Lampe

ABSTRACTShort peptides are uniquely versatile building blocks for self-assembly. Supramolecular peptide assemblies can be used to construct functional hydrogel biomaterials—an attractive approach for neural tissue engineering. Here, we report a new class of short, five-residue peptides that form hydrogels with nanofiber structures. Using rheology and spectroscopy, we describe how sequence variations, pH, and peptide concentration alter the mechanical properties of our pentapeptide hydrogels. We find that this class of seven unmodified peptides forms robust hydrogels from 0.2–20 kPa at low weight percent (less than 3 wt. %) in cell culture media, and undergoes shear-thinning and rapid self-healing. The peptides self-assemble into long fibrils with sequence-dependent fibrillar morphologies. These fibrils exhibit a unique twisted ribbon shape, as visualized by TEM and Cryo-EM imaging, with diameters in the low tens of nanometers and periodicities similar to amyloid fibrils. Experimental gelation behavior corroborates our molecular dynamics simulations, which demonstrate peptide assembly behavior, an increase in β-sheet content, and patterns of variation in solvent accessibility. Our Rapidly Assembling Pentapeptides for Injectable Delivery (RAPID) hydrogels are syringe-injectable and support cytocompatible encapsulation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs), as well as their proliferation and three-dimensional process extension. Furthermore, RAPID gels protect OPCs from mechanical membrane disruption and acute loss of viability when ejected from a syringe needle, highlighting the protective capability of the hydrogel as potential cell carriers for trans-plantation therapies. The tunable mechanical and structural properties of these supramolecular assemblies are shown to be permissive to cell expansion and remodeling, making this hydrogel system suitable as an injectable material for cell delivery and tissue engineering applications.


Biochemistry ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 140-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Lach ◽  
Matthias Künzle ◽  
Tobias Beck

Biomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 230 ◽  
pp. 119652 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taufiq Ahmad ◽  
Hayeon Byun ◽  
Jinkyu Lee ◽  
Sajeesh Kumar Madhurakat Perikamana ◽  
Young Min Shin ◽  
...  

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