| Literature DB >> 29600152 |
Joseph C Cremaldi1, Bharat Bhushan1.
Abstract
Healing is an intrinsic ability in the incredibly biodiverse populations of the plant and animal kingdoms created through evolution. Plants and animals approach healing in similar ways but with unique pathways, such as damage containment in plants or clotting in animals. After analyzing the examples of healing and defense mechanisms found in living nature, eight prevalent mechanisms were identified: reversible muscle control, clotting, cellular response, layering, protective surfaces, vascular networks or capsules, exposure, and replenishable functional coatings. Then the relationship between these mechanisms, nature's best (evolutionary) methods of mitigating and healing damage, and existing technology in self-healing materials are described. The goals of this top-level overview are to provide a framework for relating the behavior seen in living nature to bioinspired materials, act as a resource to addressing the limitations/problems with existing materials, and open up new avenues of insight and research into self-healing materials.Entities:
Keywords: animals; biomimetics, bioinspired; capsules; functional coatings; healing mechanisms; plants; protective surfaces; self-healing; vascular systems
Year: 2018 PMID: 29600152 PMCID: PMC5870156 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.9.85
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Photographs of a hand injury healing over time. The pictures show the immediate need for a healing response to stop blood loss all the way through remodeling and scarring after 22 days. Adapted from [7].
Self-healing and defense mechanisms found in living nature.
| Physical change | Healing response/defense description | Mechanism(s) in living nature | Ref. | |
| Fauna | ||||
| Vertebrates and invertebrates | Muscle contraction and relaxation | Proteins actin and myosin react with one another to reversibly slide against each other | Reversible contraction and relaxation | [ |
| Adaptive camouflage | Physical shape changes in skin can change light reflection or control pigmentation depth in the skin | Muscle control or swelling of skin to control light reflectivity or pigmentation | [ | |
| Innate immune response | Anatomical barriers, fluids (tears or mucus), cytokines and phagocytes | Physical barriers and cellular response to harmful microbes | [ | |
| Central nervous system (CNS) injury | Cellular response: inflammation, blood–brain barrier reestablishment and axonal breakdown, and limited axon regeneration after glial scarring | Clearing of debris and rapid system stabilization to limit damage | [ | |
| Peripheral nervous system (PNS) injury | Cellular response: inflammation, Schwann cells and macrophages clear debris, and axonal growth reconnects the proximal and distal nerve segments | Clearing of debris with limited scarring, allowing for cell regrowth | [ | |
| Vertebrate hard tissue | Bone break | Cellular response: inflammation, cartilage callus formation, lamellar bone generation and remodeling | Cellular response to remove debris, stabilize injury, and remodel (heal) the wound | [ |
| Vertebrate soft tissue | Wound | Cellular response: clotting, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling | Cellular signaling from short-term clotting to long-term cell growth and remodeling | [ |
| Stem cell response | Stem cells replicate and can differentiate into all cell types in order to produce new tissue | Adapted healing through regrowth of tissue | [ | |
| Molting (shedding) and replenishment | Discarding and replacing old, dead tissue to accommodate new growth (reptiles) or seasonally (birds, cats) | Shedding of the outermost layer (skin, feathers, hair) | [ | |
| Adaptive immune response | Immunological memory: antigen recognition, tailored cellular response, and B,T-cell memory | Infection/disease-specific cellular response triggered by the innate immunity | [ | |
| Invertebrate hard tissue | Wound | Endoculticle secretion from the cellular epidermis | Continual growth of exoskeleton from within, hard outer layer protecting soft inner layer | [ |
| Exoskeleton growth and ecdysis | Shell replacement as organism outgrows its current exoskeleton | Periodic replacement of outer protective exoskeleton with new growth | [ | |
| Invertebrate soft tissue | Wound | Clotting through plasma protein reactions, blood cell aggregation, or cell population explosion followed by cellular healing | Clotting through dense hemocyte network, hemocyte/plasma coagulation, cell reproduction | [ |
| Flora | ||||
| Herbaceous and woody plants | Cell walls | Barrier between plant cells that can serve as barriers to pathogens or enzymatic degradation | Physical barriers and segmentation | [ |
| Wound closure and growth | Seal-off and grow: production, differentiation, and maturation of the callus parenchyma | Cells swell and divide through hypertrophy/hyperplasia and then harden at the surface | [ | |
| Secretions after injury | When breached, special secretion cells release latex, gum, or volatile oils to aid healing/defense | Special cells are punctured and release a localized response | [ | |
| Self-cleaning | Epicuticular wax offers water-loss protection and self-cleaning properties | Replenishable functional coatings create beneficial surface behaviors | [ | |
| Active abscission or shedding dead tissue | Hydrolytic enzymes degrade cell walls in a separation layer to shed leaves, fruit, etc. | Enzymatic degradation of cell wall adhesion before abscission and scarring after | [ | |
| Innate immune response | Pattern-recognition of microbe attack to initiate an appropriate response | Cellular response for specific cell response | [ | |
| Woody plants | Growth of bark on the tree (epidermis) and roots (rhizodermis) | Continual production of thick outer layers of the epidermis (tree bark) and rhizodermis (root bark) protecting inner layers of plant and root systems | Continual replenishment of the hard, protective layers | [ |
| Compartmentalization of decay in trees | Damaged tissue sealed chemically from undamaged tissue to prevent the spread of decay | Boundary formation to isolate injured tissue | [ | |
Figure 2Healing and defense mechanisms shared by vertebrates and invertebrates including (A) muscle extension and contraction, (B) adaptive camouflage, (C) innate immunity, and (D, E) healing of central and peripheral nervous system injuries. (A) The hierarchical structure of muscle is shown, building up from the basic protein components of actin and myosin. Adapted from [39]. (B) Color change in chameleons occurs through reversible muscle control of guanine nanocrystals in their skin. Adapted from [15]. (C) Innate immunity consists of physical barriers to harmful microbes as well as an internal cellular and humoral response should they gain access to the body. Adapted from [40]. (D) In healing of a central nervous system injury, glial cells in the extracellular matrix quickly form scar tissue to maintain homeostasis, but may prevent axon repair in the process. (E) In healing a peripheral nervous system injury, Schwann cells clear the area around the axons and allow for repair without obstruction. The left images in (D) and (E) were adapted from [41].
Figure 3Healing in vertebrate hard tissue showing the stages of bone tissue repair. Healing stages include mechanisms to stabilize the sides of the bone injury until the remodeling phase completes, restoring form and function to the bone tissue. Adapted from [53].
Figure 4Types of healing in vertebrate soft tissue is shown, including (A) wounds, (B) stem cell differentiation, (C) shedding, and (D) the adaptive immune system response. (A) Soft tissue wounds elicit a short-term clotting response followed by a long-term cellular signaling response ending with remodeling of the damaged tissue. Adapted with permission from [54], copyright 2003 Cambridge University Press. (B) Stem cells, the original cells that all other cells develop from, offer unique healing opportunities through replication and differentiation. (C) Some vertebrates periodically shed their epidermal tissue for growth or seasonal changes, revealing new tissue beneath. Reproduced from [55], copyright 2009 Goellnitz, under CC-BY-NC 2.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/). (D) The adaptive immune system, unique to vertebrates, utilizes a stored “memory” response to fighting and removing harmful microbes. Adapted from [40].
Figure 5Healing response in the hard tissue (exoskeleton) of invertebrates to (A) wounds and (B) shedding. (A) The exoskeleton of invertebrates consists of several layers being secreted from the epidermis on the inner side. (B) The exoskeletons of arthropods cannot grow with an organism and are periodically cast off in a process known as ecdysis to reveal new exoskeleton growth. Reproduced with permission from [69], copyright 2000 The Company of Biologists.
Figure 6Healing response to invertebrate soft tissue wounds. Invertebrates rely on quickly clotting wounds to stem loss of hemolymph, which can quickly become fatal in their open circulatory systems. Adapted from [47].
Figure 7Healing and defense mechanisms in all plants (herbaceous and woody), including (A) protective cell walls, (B) wound closure and growth, (C) secretion cells, (D) functional layers, (E) abscission, and (F) immune response. (A) All plant cells are surrounded by a cell wall that (among other functions) protects the cell and provides structure. Left image reproduced with permission from [71], copyright 2005 Nature Publishing Group. (B) Cells at the surface of a wound in plants replicate and/or grow (hyperplasia and hypertrophy) to seal off the open wound and prevent disease. Left image reproduced from [72]. (C) Some plants have special secretion cells that release their contents to aid in healing and/or defense once the cell wall is damaged. Left image reproduced with permission from [73], copyright 2010 WIT Press. (D) Using a combination of hierarchical roughness and surface chemistry, plants can achieve complex self-cleaning behavior in surface (functional) layers. Images reproduced with permission from [32], copyright 2009 The Royal Society. (E) In order to purposefully release tissue such as damage leaves or seeds pods, plants use enzymes to break down tissue causing it to break more easily in a process called abscission. (F) Plant immunity relies on physical barriers in the cell wall and epidermis, but also uses an intracellular response to stave off harmful microbe attacks.
Figure 8Healing and defense in woody plants, including (A) protective bark and (B) compartmentalization of decay in trees (CODIT). (A) Trees’ first line of defense is the hard outer bark that prevents physical damage from reaching the softer inner tissue. Left image reproduced from [75], copyright 2004 under CC-BY-SA 3.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/). (B) Trees may aim to contain damage from infection and disease rather than heal it by sealing it away within natural barriers formed in the tree during growth. Left image reproduced from [76], copyright 2012 under CC-BY-SA 3.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).
Figure 9Examples of prevalent self-healing mechanisms found in fauna showing reversible muscle control in chameleons, clotting and cellular responses in humans, shedding in snakes, and innate protection in ladybugs. Each example is given with an illustration and description of the overall mechanisms. The top left image was reproduced from [15]. The second image on the left was reproduced from [7]. The bottom left image was reproduced from [77], copyright 2009 under CC-BY-SA 2.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/).
Figure 10Examples of prevalent self-healing mechanisms found in plants showing vascular networks and cells of latex trees, wound healing through exposure in roses, and replenishable and functional coatings of lotus leaves. Each example is given with an illustration and description of the overall mechanisms. The top left image was reproduced with permission from [73], copyright 2010 WIT Press. The middle left image was reproduced from [78], copyright 2005 Michael Becker under CC-BY-SA 3.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/). The bottom left image was reproduced with permission from [32], copyright 2009 The Royal Society.
Figure 11Types of bioinspired healing materials including (A) protective coatings, (B) autogenous healing, (C) shape memory, (D) chemical activity, (E) vascular systems, and (F) bio-healing. Each example is given with a description of the mechanism and comments labeling the (internal or external) source of healing materials/energy and the (limited or unlimited) nature of healing responses. The image in (B) was adapted from [79]. The image in (D) was adapted from [80], copyright 2013 RSC Publishing. The image in (F) was adapted from [81].
Figure 12Translation of healing in nature into self-cleaning and self-healing materials. Mechanisms in nature, the self-cleaning lotus leaf and vascular cells of the weeping fig tree, can be translated into a new self-cleaning, self-healing material based on replenishable functional surfaces and targeted capsule delivery of self-healing materials that also preserve the functionality of the surface. Upper left images reproduced with permission from (left) [32], copyright 2009 The Royal Society, and (right) [73], copyright 2010 WIT Press.
Figure 13Chart relating self-healing and defense mechanisms found in living nature with prevalent self-healing mechanism categories with bioinspired types of synthetic materials.