| Literature DB >> 25299693 |
Keng-Liang Ou1, Hossein Hosseinkhani2.
Abstract
In the past few years, biomaterials technologies together with significant efforts on developing biology have revolutionized the process of engineered materials. Three dimensional (3D) in vitro technology aims to develop set of tools that are simple, inexpensive, portable and robust that could be commercialized and used in various fields of biomedical sciences such as drug discovery, diagnostic tools, and therapeutic approaches in regenerative medicine. The proliferation of cells in the 3D scaffold needs an oxygen and nutrition supply. 3D scaffold materials should provide such an environment for cells living in close proximity. 3D scaffolds that are able to regenerate or restore tissue and/or organs have begun to revolutionize medicine and biomedical science. Scaffolds have been used to support and promote the regeneration of tissues. Different processing techniques have been developed to design and fabricate three dimensional scaffolds for tissue engineering implants. Throughout the chapters we discuss in this review, we inform the reader about the potential applications of different 3D in vitro systems that can be applied for fabricating a wider range of novel biomaterials for use in tissue engineering.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25299693 PMCID: PMC4227198 DOI: 10.3390/ijms151017938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Interdisciplinary approach of 3D in vitro technology.
Figure 2Cellular microenvironment showing main and specific components of extracellular matrix (ECM).
Dependence of tissue/organ function on tissue/organ Microstructure.
| Nanoscale | Microscale | Macroscale |
|---|---|---|
| support structures (<1 μm) to control individual cell behavior | support structures (1–100 μm) to control cell–cell interactions and cell-substrate interactions | support structures (>100 μm) for structural support |
| adhesion, migration proliferation | cell–ECM interaction | tissue–oran interaction |
Figure 3The cell microenvironment (niche) directs cellular fate and function.
Comparison between 2D and 3D in vitro culture systems.
| 2D Culture (Tissue Culture Dish) | 3D Culture (Biomaterials) |
|---|---|
| The initial rate of cell growth is higher, but the proliferation stops once the cells reached confluence | Provides larger surface area available for cell attachment and spreading than that of 2D culture and can affect cell adhesion, spreading, and proliferation. Differentiation, cell viability and morphology of cultured cells in 3D biomaterials are significantly different with cells cultured in 2D tissue culture plate |
Figure 4Schematic illustration of spinner bioreactor.
Figure 5Principal of in vitro cell culture on 3D scaffolds in static, spinner-flask and perfusion culture.
Figure 63D printing technology for tissue engineering applications.
Figure 7Schematic illustration of tissue engineering technology.
Figure 8Schematic illustration of tissue engineering based on 3D biomaterials technology.
Advances in 3D biomaterials for tissue engineering applications.
| Advances in biomaterials for tissue engineering applications. | Nano-engineering of molecular templates and supra-molecular structures to engineer new structure of 3D biomaterials [ |
| Self-assembling amphiphilic peptide and protein systems that self-assemble to form various nanostructures like nanofibers, nanotubes, vesicles, helical ribbons and fibrous scaffolds [ | |
| Artificial proteins that self-assemble to form hydrogels in response to pH and environmental changes. Protein hydrogels can be used for advanced wound closure and tissue repair in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering [ | |
| Used as scaffolds to fabricate nanowires, templates for metallization (Ex: Histidine-rich peptide nanotubes were metallized with gold nanocrystals and the organic peptide scaffold was removed to make a conducting gold nanowires [ | |
| Targeted tissue engineering using ligand-receptors biomaterials that are chemically modified to mimic ECM to direct stem cells differentiation [ | |
| Combinational technology of micro- and nano-fabrication to mimic mechanical properties of ECM to accelerate tissue regeneration [ | |
| Controlled release technology of growth factors from implanted 3D biomaterials to regenerate new tissues [ | |
| Gene therapy technology in combination with 3D biomaterials for tissue engineering applications [ | |
| Enhancement of angiogenesis by using 3D biomaterials to enhance survival of transplanted stem cells [ |