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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://elib.bsu.by/handle/123456789/288905
Title: Macromolecular crowding transforms regenerative medicine by enabling the accelerated development of functional and truly three-dimensional cell assembled micro tissues
Authors: De Pieri, A.
Korntner, S.H.
Capella-Monsonis, H.
Tsiapalis, D.
Kostjuk, S.V.
Churbanov, S.
Timashev, P.
Gorelov, A.
Rochev, Y.
Zeugolis, D.I.
Keywords: ЭБ БГУ::ЕСТЕСТВЕННЫЕ И ТОЧНЫЕ НАУКИ::Химия
ЭБ БГУ::ТЕХНИЧЕСКИЕ И ПРИКЛАДНЫЕ НАУКИ. ОТРАСЛИ ЭКОНОМИКИ::Медицина и здравоохранение
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Citation: Biomaterials 2022;287
Abstract: caffold-free in vitro organogenesis exploits the innate ability of cells to synthesise and deposit their own extracellular matrix to fabricate tissue-like assemblies. Unfortunately, cell-assembled tissue engineered concepts require prolonged ex vivo culture periods of very high cell numbers for the development of a borderline three-dimensional implantable device, which are associated with phenotypic drift and high manufacturing costs, thus, hindering their clinical translation and commercialisation. Herein, we report the accelerated (10 days) development of a truly three-dimensional (338.1 ± 42.9 μm) scaffold-free tissue equivalent that promotes fast wound healing and induces formation of neotissue composed of mature collagen fibres, using human adipose derived stem cells seeded at only 50,000 cells/cm2 on an poly (N-isopropylacrylamide-co-N-tert-butylacrylamide (PNIPAM86-NTBA14) temperature-responsive electrospun scaffold and grown under macromolecular crowding conditions (50 μg/ml carrageenan). Our data pave the path for a new era in scaffold-free regenerative medicin
URI: https://elib.bsu.by/handle/123456789/288905
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121674
Scopus: 85133762845
Sponsorship: This work has also received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie, grant agreement No. 676338and the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, grant agreement No. 866126. This publication has emanated from research supported by grants from Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) under grant numbers 15/CDA/3629 and 19/FFP/6982and Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) under grant number 13/RC/2073_2. This work was also supported by the Russian Science Foundation, grant agreement No. 21-15-00349. The authors would like to thank staff at the Geofluid Research Laboratory, Earth and Ocean Sciences, NUI Galway for assistance with the time lapse microscopy. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Prof Alexander Gorelov, who suddenly passed away. This work has also received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie, grant agreement No. 676338 and the European Research Council ( ERC ) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, grant agreement No. 866126 . This publication has emanated from research supported by grants from Science Foundation Ireland ( SFI ) under grant numbers 15/CDA/3629 and 19/FFP/6982 and Science Foundation Ireland ( SFI ) and European Regional Development Fund ( ERDF ) under grant number 13/RC/2073_2 . This work was also supported by the Russian Science Foundation , grant agreement No. 21-15-00349 . The authors would like to thank staff at the Geofluid Research Laboratory, Earth and Ocean Sciences, NUI Galway for assistance with the time lapse microscopy. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Prof Alexander Gorelov, who suddenly passed away
Licence: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Appears in Collections:Статьи химического факультета

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