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Biomaterials for corneal bioengineering

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posted on 2024-11-16, 03:55 authored by Zhi ChenZhi Chen, Jingjing You, Xiao LiuXiao Liu, Simon Cooper, Christopher Hodge, Gerard Sutton, Jeremy CrookJeremy Crook, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace
Corneal transplantation is an important surgical treatment for many common corneal diseases. However, a worldwide shortage of tissue from suitable corneal donors has meant that many people are not able to receive sight-restoring operations. In addition, rejection is a major cause of corneal transplant failure. Bioengineering corneal tissue has recently gained widespread attention. In order to facilitate corneal regeneration, a range of materials is currently being investigated. The ideal substrate requires sufficient tectonic durability, biocompatibility with cultured cellular elements, transparency, and perhaps biodegradability and clinical compliance. This review considers the anatomy and function of the native cornea as a precursor to evaluating a variety of biomaterials for corneal regeneration including key characteristics for optimal material form and function. The integration of appropriate cells with the most appropriate biomaterials is also discussed. Taken together, the information provided offers insight into the requirements for fabricating synthetic and semisynthetic corneas for in vitro modeling of tissue development and disease, pharmaceutical screening, and in vivo application for regenerative medicine.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science

Australian Research Council

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New dimensions in organic bionics

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Chen, Z., You, J., Liu, X., Cooper, S., Hodge, C., Sutton, G., Crook, J. M. & Wallace, G. G. (2018). Biomaterials for corneal bioengineering. Biomedical Materials, 13 (3), 032002-1-032002-27.

Journal title

Biomedical Materials (Bristol)

Volume

13

Issue

3

Language

English

RIS ID

124478

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