(Press-News.org) A new biomaterial designed for repairing damaged human tissue doesn't wrinkle up when it is stretched. The invention from nanoengineers at the University of California, San Diego marks a significant breakthrough in tissue engineering because it more closely mimics the properties of native human tissue.
Shaochen Chen, professor in the Department of NanoEngineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering, hopes future tissue patches, which are used to repair damaged heart walls, blood vessels and skin, for example, will be more compatible with native human tissue than the patches available today. His findings were published in a recent issue of the journal Advanced Functional Materials.
The new biomaterial was created using a new biofabrication platform that Chen is developing under a four-year, $1.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. This biofabrication technique uses light, precisely controlled mirrors and a computer projection system -- shined on a solution of new cells and polymers -- to build three-dimensional scaffolds with well-defined patterns of any shape for tissue engineering.
"We are also exploring other opportunities," said Chen. "It's a new material. I think it's just a matter of time before more people will pick up and find applications for it in defense, energy and communications, for instance."
Although Chen's team is focused on creating biological materials, he said the manufacturing technology could be used to engineer many other kinds of materials including metal parts used in ships and spacecraft, for example.
Shape turned out to be essential to the new material's mechanical property. While most engineered tissue is layered in scaffolds that take the shape of circular or square holes, Chen's team created two new shapes called "reentrant honeycomb" and "cut missing rib." Both shapes exhibit the property of negative Poisson's ratio (i.e. not wrinkling when stretched) and maintain this property whether the tissue patch has one or multiple layers. One layer is double the thickness of a human hair, and the number of layers used in a tissue patch depends on the thickness of the native tissue that doctors are trying to repair. A single layer would not be thick enough to repair a heart wall or skin tissue, for example. The next phase of research will involve working with the Department of Bioengineering at the Jacobs School of Engineering to make tissue grafts to repair damaged blood vessels.
INFORMATION:
The team includes postdoctoral researchers in multiple disciplines: David Fozdar with the University of Texas at Austin, Department of Mechanical Engineering; Li-Hsin Han with the Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of Orthopeadic Surgery; and Pranav Soman and Jim Woo Lee at the UCSD Jacobs School of Engineering Department of NanoEngineering.
Nanoengineers invent new biomaterial that more closely mimics human tissue
New UC San Diego biomaterial doesn't wrinkle up when stretched
2011-05-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Teaching Etiquette to Your Dogs Isn't Difficult With Proficient Dog Training Session in Houston
2011-05-27
Are you worrying about the disobedience of your dog? Dogs need plenty of physical exercise, an effective standard of communication and mental stimulation, and a lack in any one of these could affect your dog's behavior. Although pet dogs aren't that difficult to deal with some breeds are very difficult to train and control. Whatever effort you put, in training your dog sometimes may yield no required result. Through dog obedience training, that provide customized, private, in-home lessons to your dogs, they are taught to behave in a certain manner. After each lesson, you ...
Researchers recommend preparticipation cardiac screening for college athletes
2011-05-27
New York, NY, May 25, 2011 – Sudden cardiac death in young athletes who had not previously exhibited symptoms is a relatively rare yet tragic event. This occurs in around 60-80 young athletes annually in the United States. In the June 2011 issue of The American Journal of Medicine, researchers collected electrocardiograms and echocardiograms of 964 athletes at a single university and found that distinct ECG abnormalities were present in 10% and were more common in males as well as black athletes. Two athletes were subsequently excluded from competition.
Investigators ...
Keeping the Dream Alive: Every Week is National Small Business Week
2011-05-27
The cofounder of the Small Business Survival Summit urged Maryland business owners to celebrate Small Business Week by becoming more adept at business practices that will make them successful.
"Small business is the core strength of the American economy," says summit creator Patrick Chambers. "More than half of all Americans either own or work for a small business. And while there's a lot of talk about creating jobs, let's remember that small businesses create 60 to 80 percent of new jobs."
The first-ever Small Business Survival Summit, scheduled ...
Inside the infant mind
2011-05-27
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Over the past two decades, scientists have shown that babies only a few months old have a solid grasp on basic rules of the physical world. They understand that objects can't wink in and out of existence, and that objects can't "teleport" from one spot to another.
Now, an international team of researchers co-led by MIT's Josh Tenenbaum has found that infants can use that knowledge to form surprisingly sophisticated expectations of how novel situations will unfold.
Furthermore, the scientists developed a computational model of infant cognition that ...
Scientists detect Earth-equivalent amount of water within the moon
2011-05-27
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — There is water inside the moon – so much, in fact, that in some places it rivals the amount of water found within the Earth.
The finding from a scientific team including Brown University comes from the first-ever measurements of water in lunar melt inclusions. Those measurements show that some parts of the lunar mantle have as much water as the Earth's upper mantle.
Lunar melt inclusions are tiny globules of molten rock trapped within crystals that are found in volcanic glass deposits formed during explosive eruptions. The new finding, ...
Auto Repair Shop Direct Mail Provider Mudlick Mail Forms Partnership With Honest-1
2011-05-27
Auto repair shop direct mail ( http://www.mudlickmail.com/ ) services provider, Mudlick Mail has formed a partnership with Honest-1 Auto Care, the nation's only eco-friendly auto repair chain. The partnership will help Honest-1 franchisees more effectively market and advertise their shops and grow their businesses.
Mudlick Mail ( http://www.mudlickmail.com/ ) will offer exclusive direct mail packaging and pricing for Honest-1 franchisees, according to the agreement. As part of the company's partnership with Mudlick Mail, Honest-1 franchisees will receive a market analysis, ...
Science paper argues against conclusion that bacteria consumed Deepwater Horizon methane
2011-05-27
Athens, Ga. – A technical comment published in the current (May 27) edition of the journal Science casts doubt on a widely publicized study that concluded that a bacterial bloom in the Gulf of Mexico consumed the methane discharged from the Deepwater Horizon well.
The debate has implications for the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem as well as for predictions of the effect of global warming, said marine scientist and lead author Samantha Joye, University of Georgia Athletic Association Professor in Arts and Sciences.
Based on methane and oxygen distributions measured at 207 ...
Lunar water brings portions of Moon's origin story into question
2011-05-27
Washington, D.C.—The Moon has much more water than previously thought, a team of scientists led by Carnegie's Erik Hauri has discovered. Their research, published May 26 in Science Express, shows that inclusions of magma trapped within crystals collected during the Apollo 17 mission contain 100 times more water than earlier measurements. These results could markedly change the prevailing theory about the Moon's origin.
The research team used a state-of-the-art NanoSIMS 50L ion microprobe to measure seven tiny samples of magma trapped within lunar crystals as so-called ...
Wikitude announces European expansion of Wikitude Drive at Location Business Summit in Amsterdam
2011-05-27
As part of this year's Location Business Summit in Amsterdam, Wikitude announces the international expansion of Wikitude Drive. "In addition to Germany, Austria and Switzerland, the world's first Augmented Reality navigation system is now available to millions of additional Android users in the UK, Italy, Spain and France" says Andy Gstoll, Wikitude's CMO at the Locations Business Summit in Amsterdam. The award-winning application does not need any maps, but instead overlays the desired route onto the camera view of the mobile device. For as little as 9.99 Euro ...
Extensive protein interaction network controls gene regulation
2011-05-27
HOUSTON -- (May 27, 2011) – The genes of a cell are like the 88 keys of a piano. To play chords and music, however, the keys must be activated in exact combinations by a pianist's hands. Those hands represent the coregulators of a cell that simultaneously and precisely activate genes to produce all of the cell's functions.
More than half of your DNA is devoted to regulating how the genes that make proteins – the workhorses of the cells – carry out their tasks, said Dr. Bert O'Malley (http://www.bcm.edu/mcb/index.cfm?pmid=7694), who, with Dr. Jun Qin (http://www.bcm.edu/biochem/?PMID=3779), ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Research Spotlight: Researchers reveal the influences behind timing of sleep spindle production
New research reveals groundwater pathways across continent
Students and faculty to join research teams this spring at Department of Energy National Laboratories and a fusion facility
SETI Forward recognizes tomorrow’s cosmic pioneers
Top mental health research achievements of 2024 from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation
FAU names Lewis S. Nelson, M.D., Dean of the Schmidt College of Medicine
UC Irvine-led study challenges traditional risk factors for brain health in the oldest-old
Study shows head trauma may activate latent viruses, leading to neurodegeneration
Advancements in neural implant research enhance durability
SwRI models Pluto-Charon formation scenario that mimics Earth-Moon system
Researchers identify public policies that work to prevent suicide
Korea University College of Medicine and Yale Univeristy co-host forum on Advancing Healthcare through Data and AI Innovations
Nuclear lipid droplets: Key regulators of aging and nuclear homeostasis
Driving autonomous vehicles to a more efficient future
Severe maternal morbidity among pregnant people with opioid use disorder enrolled in Medicaid
Macronutrients in human milk exposed to antidepressant and anti-inflammatory medications
Exploring the eco-friendly future of antibiotic particles
Can you steam away prostate cancer?
The CTAO becomes a European Research Infrastructure Consortium
Introduction to science journalism guide published in Albanian
Official launch of Global Heat Health Information Network Southeast Asia Hub at NUS Medicine
Childhood smoking increases a person’s risk of developing COPD
MD Anderson and Myriad Genetics form strategic alliance to evaluate clinical utility of Myriad’s molecular residual disease assay
Method can detect harmful salts forming in nuclear waste melters
Researchers reveal how psychological stress may aggravate skin allergies
International partnership aims to provide first-class osteopathy training
Reducing irrigation for livestock feed crops is needed to save Great Salt Lake, study argues
Clean energy tax credit safeguards could save taxpayers $1 trillion
New genetic biocontrol breakthrough offers hope against disease-carrying mosquitoes and agricultural pests
Sex differences in brain structure present at birth
[Press-News.org] Nanoengineers invent new biomaterial that more closely mimics human tissueNew UC San Diego biomaterial doesn't wrinkle up when stretched