Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications

Tissue engineering, or the development of three-dimensional (3D) macroscopic biological tissues in vitro, have various important applications: as a medical intervention to replace lost or abnormal cells, tissues and organs through transplantation, as a self-regulating drug delivery vehicle, or as an...

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Main Author: Leong, Wenyan
Other Authors: Wang Dongan
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/65947
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-659472023-03-03T15:59:47Z Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications Leong, Wenyan Wang Dongan School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering Tissue engineering, or the development of three-dimensional (3D) macroscopic biological tissues in vitro, have various important applications: as a medical intervention to replace lost or abnormal cells, tissues and organs through transplantation, as a self-regulating drug delivery vehicle, or as an in vitro study model or drug testing platform. The technology is highly anticipated to resolve the severe donor shortage and immune rejection issues of current replacement therapy: allogenic and xenogeneic transplantations. Furthermore, successful development of in vitro study and testing models not only decreases the use of animal models which pose deviation from human responses; it also can increase drug safety by providing crucial insights on drug dosing prior to pre- and clinical trials. However, oxygen diffusion constraints poses a bottleneck in development of macroscopic tissues constructs. We therefore propose to incorporate sacrificial gelatin microspheres in macroscopic hydrogel scaffolds as a versatile tissue engineering platform through two purposes, namely as a porogen for better permeability, and additionally as a cell delivery vehicle for non-anchorage dependent cell (non-ADC) types. Gelatin, being a temperature-responsive hydrogel, dissolves naturally when constructs are cultured for tissue development at physiological temperature; this is a simple and natural one-step strategy of creating cavities in a macroscopic construct. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (SCBE) 2016-02-03T03:10:49Z 2016-02-03T03:10:49Z 2016 Thesis Leong, W. (2016). Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/65947 10.32657/10356/65947 en 202 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
Leong, Wenyan
Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
description Tissue engineering, or the development of three-dimensional (3D) macroscopic biological tissues in vitro, have various important applications: as a medical intervention to replace lost or abnormal cells, tissues and organs through transplantation, as a self-regulating drug delivery vehicle, or as an in vitro study model or drug testing platform. The technology is highly anticipated to resolve the severe donor shortage and immune rejection issues of current replacement therapy: allogenic and xenogeneic transplantations. Furthermore, successful development of in vitro study and testing models not only decreases the use of animal models which pose deviation from human responses; it also can increase drug safety by providing crucial insights on drug dosing prior to pre- and clinical trials. However, oxygen diffusion constraints poses a bottleneck in development of macroscopic tissues constructs. We therefore propose to incorporate sacrificial gelatin microspheres in macroscopic hydrogel scaffolds as a versatile tissue engineering platform through two purposes, namely as a porogen for better permeability, and additionally as a cell delivery vehicle for non-anchorage dependent cell (non-ADC) types. Gelatin, being a temperature-responsive hydrogel, dissolves naturally when constructs are cultured for tissue development at physiological temperature; this is a simple and natural one-step strategy of creating cavities in a macroscopic construct.
author2 Wang Dongan
author_facet Wang Dongan
Leong, Wenyan
format Theses and Dissertations
author Leong, Wenyan
author_sort Leong, Wenyan
title Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
title_short Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
title_full Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
title_fullStr Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
title_full_unstemmed Sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
title_sort sacrificial gelatin microspheres for tissue engineering applications
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/65947
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