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Keratin-Containing Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Applications: A Review Publisher Pubmed

Summary: A study highlights keratin-based scaffolds’ potential in tissue engineering, supporting cell growth for bone, skin, and nerve repair. #TissueEngineering #Biomaterials

Soleymani Eil Bakhtiari S1 ; Karbasi S2
Authors

Source: Journal of Biomaterials Science, Polymer Edition Published:2024


Abstract

In tissue engineering and regenerative medicine applications, the utilization of bioactive materials has become a routine tool. The goal of tissue engineering is to create new organs and tissues by combining cell biology, materials science, reactor engineering, and clinical research. As part of the growth pattern for primary cells in an organ, backing material is frequently used as a supporting material. A porous three-dimensional (3D) scaffold can provide cells with optimal conditions for proliferating, migrating, differentiating, and functioning as a framework. Optimizing the scaffolds’ structure and altering their surface may improve cell adhesion and proliferation. A keratin-based biomaterials platform has been developed as a result of discoveries made over the past century in the extraction, purification, and characterization of keratin proteins from hair and wool fibers. Biocompatibility, biodegradability, intrinsic biological activity, and cellular binding motifs make keratin an attractive biomaterial for tissue engineering scaffolds. Scaffolds for tissue engineering have been developed from extracted keratin proteins because of their capacity to self-assemble and polymerize into intricate 3D structures. In this review article, applications of keratin-based scaffolds in different tissues including bone, skin, nerve, and vascular are explained based on common methods of fabrication such as electrospinning, freeze-drying process, and sponge replication method. © 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
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