Barnes Catherine P, Sell Scott A, Boland Eugene D, Simpson David G, Bowlin Gary L
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23284-3067, USA.
Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2007 Dec 10;59(14):1413-33. doi: 10.1016/j.addr.2007.04.022. Epub 2007 Aug 25.
Tissue engineering is an interdisciplinary field that has attempted to utilize a variety of processing methods with synthetic and natural polymers to fabricate scaffolds for the regeneration of tissues and organs. The study of structure-function relationships in both normal and pathological tissues has been coupled with the development of biologically active substitutes or engineered materials. The fibrillar collagens, types I, II, and III, are the most abundant natural polymers in the body and are found throughout the interstitial spaces where they function to impart overall structural integrity and strength to tissues. The collagen structures, referred to as extracellular matrix (ECM), provide the cells with the appropriate biological environment for embryologic development, organogenesis, cell growth, and wound repair. In the native tissues, the structural ECM proteins range in diameter from 50 to 500 nm. In order to create scaffolds or ECM analogues, which are truly biomimicking at this scale, one must employ nanotechnology. Recent advances in nanotechnology have led to a variety of approaches for the development of engineered ECM analogues. To date, three processing techniques (self-assembly, phase separation, and electrospinning) have evolved to allow the fabrication of nanofibrous scaffolds. With these advances, the long-awaited and much anticipated construction of a truly "biomimicking" or "ideal" tissue engineered environment, or scaffold, for a variety of tissues is now highly feasible. This review will discuss the three primary technologies (with a focus on electrospinning) available to create tissue engineering scaffolds that are capable of mimicking native tissue, as well as explore the wide array of materials investigated for use in scaffolds.
组织工程是一个跨学科领域,它试图利用各种加工方法,将合成聚合物和天然聚合物用于制造组织和器官再生的支架。对正常组织和病理组织中结构-功能关系的研究,与生物活性替代物或工程材料的开发相结合。I型、II型和III型纤维状胶原蛋白是体内最丰富的天然聚合物,遍布于间质空间,其作用是赋予组织整体结构完整性和强度。被称为细胞外基质(ECM)的胶原蛋白结构,为细胞提供了胚胎发育、器官形成、细胞生长和伤口修复的适宜生物环境。在天然组织中,结构性细胞外基质蛋白的直径范围为50至500纳米。为了制造在这个尺度上真正具有仿生功能的支架或细胞外基质类似物,必须采用纳米技术。纳米技术的最新进展带来了多种开发工程化细胞外基质类似物的方法。迄今为止,三种加工技术(自组装、相分离和静电纺丝)已经发展成熟,可用于制造纳米纤维支架。随着这些进展,为多种组织构建长期期待且备受瞩目的真正“仿生”或“理想”的组织工程环境或支架,现在已具有很高的可行性。本文将讨论用于创建能够模拟天然组织的组织工程支架的三种主要技术(重点是静电纺丝),并探讨用于支架的各种研究材料。