Back to Search Start Over

Fabricated Elastin

Authors :
Giselle C. Yeo
Behnaz Aghaei-Ghareh-Bolagh
Edwin P. Brackenreg
Matti A. Hiob
Pearl Lee
Anthony S. Weiss
Source :
Advanced Healthcare Materials. 4:2530-2556
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

The mechanical stability, elasticity, inherent bioactivity, and self-assembly properties of elastin make it a highly attractive candidate for the fabrication of versatile biomaterials. The ability to engineer specific peptide sequences derived from elastin allows the precise control of these physicochemical and organizational characteristics, and further broadens the diversity of elastin-based applications. Elastin and elastin-like peptides can also be modified or blended with other natural or synthetic moieties, including peptides, proteins, polysaccharides, and polymers, to augment existing capabilities or confer additional architectural and biofunctional features to compositionally pure materials. Elastin and elastin-based composites have been subjected to diverse fabrication processes, including heating, electrospinning, wet spinning, solvent casting, freeze-drying, and cross-linking, for the manufacture of particles, fibers, gels, tubes, sheets and films. The resulting materials can be tailored to possess specific strength, elasticity, morphology, topography, porosity, wettability, surface charge, and bioactivity. This extraordinary tunability of elastin-based constructs enables their use in a range of biomedical and tissue engineering applications such as targeted drug delivery, cell encapsulation, vascular repair, nerve regeneration, wound healing, and dermal, cartilage, bone, and dental replacement.

Details

ISSN :
21922640
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advanced Healthcare Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ac8b7aa6adf4f8d8dd4f7e9580a0bf7