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Self-assembled peptide nanostructures for the fabrication of cell scaffolds

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posted on 2024-10-30, 20:53 authored by Rui Li, Alexandra Rodriguez, David Nisbet, Colin Barrow, Richard WilliamsRichard Williams
The fabrication of artificial scaffolds that effectively mimic the host environment of the cell have exciting potential for the treatment of many diseases in regenerative medicine. In particular, appropriately designed scaffolds have the capacity to support, replace, and mediate the transplantation of therapeutic cells in order to regenerate damaged or diseased tissues. To achieve these goals for regeneration, the engineering of an environment structurally similar to the native extracellular matrix (ECM) is necessary in order to closely match the chemical and physical conditions found within the extracellular niche. Recently, self-assembled peptide (SAP) hydrogels have shown great potential for such biological applications due to their inherent biocompatibility, propensity to form higher order structures, rich chemical functionality and ease of synthesis. Importantly, it is possible to control the organization and properties of the target materials as the chemical structure is determined by amino acid sequence. Here, the development of SAP hydrogels as functional cell scaffolds and useful tools in tissue engineering is reviewed.

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    ISBN - Is published in 9780323296427 (urn:isbn:9780323296427)

Start page

33

End page

61

Total pages

29

Outlet

Micro and Nanofabrication Using Self-Assembled Biological Nanostructures

Editors

J. Castillo-León and W. E. Svendsen

Publisher

William Andrew Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

Former Identifier

2006049891

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-02-03