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The Bionic Interface: Considering the Material Mediated Electrical Stimulation of Stem Cells.

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posted on 2025-12-01, 03:15 authored by kaiwen Zhangkaiwen Zhang, Daniel De Maria, Mercyjayapriya JebakumarMercyjayapriya Jebakumar, James Collins, Kate FoxKate Fox, Peter SherrellPeter Sherrell, Amy SherrellAmy Sherrell
Electromaterials, in the field of tissue engineering, are designed to use an electrical signal to induce specific biological responses in cells and tissues. Using materials to control stem cell fate is a substantial field of research within tissue engineering, where stem cell differentiation is controlled through careful design of the material properties (roughness, topography, stiffness, and surface chemistry); the introduction of electromaterials into this field has added an extra dimensionality along with the ability to provide dynamic, temporally controlled cues through electrical stimulation. While significant research has focused on the cell-material interface for electrical stimulation platforms, the underlying reasons why certain materials outperform others remain poorly understood. Most existing studies emphasise mechanical stiffness and chemical composition, often overlooking the role of electronic charge transport. In this perspective, the focus is shifted to the charge transport properties of commonly used electrically conductive materials-such as metal-based electrode, carbon-based composites, and conjugated polymers-and discusses how these mechanisms modulate cellular responses. It is proposed that a deeper understanding of how materials inject, store, and redistribute charge at the interface can offer a new paradigm in designing electrically active scaffolds for more predictable and effective stem cell modulation.<p></p>

Funding

Australian Government

Australian Research Council | DP200100612

Australian Research Council | DP250101190

History

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    PMID - Has metadata PubMed 41020390
  4. 4.
    DOI - Is published in DOI: 10.1002/adma.202512399
  5. 5.
    ISSN - Is published in 0935-9648 (Advanced Materials)
  6. 6.
    EISSN - Is published in 1521-4095 (Advanced Materials)

Journal

Advanced Materials

Number

e12399

Total pages

18

Publisher

Wiley

Language

eng

Copyright

© 2025 The Author(s). Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH

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