Biomaterials, Biodegradables and Biomimetics Research Group

Review Paper

Marine origin materials on biomaterials and advanced therapies to cartilage tissue engineering and regenerative medicine

Abstract

The body's self-repair capacity is limited, including injuries on articular cartilage zones. Over the past few decades, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine (TERM) have focused the studies on the development of natural biomaterials for clinical applications aiming to overcome this self-therapeutic bottleneck. This review focus on the development of these biomaterials using compounds and materials from marine sources, able to be produced in a sustainable way, as an alternative to mammal sources (e.g., collagens) and benefiting from their biological properties, such as biocompatibility, low antigenicity, biodegradability, among others. The structure and composition of the new biomaterials require mimicking the native extracellular matrix (ECM) of articular cartilage tissue. To design an ideal temporary tissue-scaffold, it needs to provide a suitable environment for cell growth (cell attachment, proliferation, and differentiation), towards the regeneration of the damaged tissues. Overall, the purpose of this review is to summarize, various marine sources to be used on the development of different tissue-scaffolds with the capability to sustain cells envisaging cartilage tissue engineering, analysing the systems displaying more promising performance, while pointing current limitations and steps to be given in the near future.

Journal
Biomaterials science
Pagination
1-19
ISSN
20474849
URL
https://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2021/BM/D1BM00809A
Keywords
articular cartilage, biomedical engineering, Hydrogels, Injectable biomaterials, marine biomaterials, marine biopolymers, tissue-scaffolds
Rights
Closed Access
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Status
published
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