Biofabrication

Biofabrication is a branch of biotechnology specialising in the research and development of biologically engineered processes for the automated production of biologically functional products through bioprinting or bioassembly and subsequent tissue maturation processes;[1] as well as techniques such as directed assembly, which employs localised external stimuli guide the fabrification process; enzymatic assembly, which utilises selective biocatalysts to build macromolecular structures; and self-assembly, in which the biological material guides its own assembly according to its internal information.[2] These processes may facilitate fabrication at the micro- and nanoscales.[2] Biofabricated products are constructed and structurally organised with a range of biological materials including bioactive molecules, biomaterials, living cells, cell aggregates such as micro-tissues and micro-organs on chips, and hybrid cell-material constructs.[1]

See also

  • Biofabrication (journal) – academic journal
  • Bionics – Application of natural systems to technology
  • Biosensor – Probe which tests for biological molecules
  • Organ culture – Cultivation of organ tissue in vitro
  • Synthetic biology – Interdisciplinary branch of biology and engineering
  • Tissue engineering – Biomedical engineering discipline

References

Works cited

  • Moroni, Lorenzo; Boland, Thomas; Burdick, Jason A.; De Maria, Carmelo; Derby, Brian; Forgacs, Gabor; Groll, Jürgen; Li, Qing; Malda, Jos; Mironov, Vladimir A.; Mota, Carlos; Nakamura, Makoto; Shu, Wenmiao; Takeuchi, Shoji; Woodfield, Tim B.F. (2018). "Biofabrication: A Guide to Technology and Terminology". Trends in Biotechnology. 36 (4): 384–402. doi:10.1016/j.tibtech.2017.10.015. PMID 29137814.
  • Yi, Hyunmin; Wu, Li-Qun; Bentley, William E.; Ghodssi, Reza; Rubloff, Gary W.; Culver, James N.; Payne, Gregory F. (2005). "Biofabrication with Chitosan". Biomacromolecules. 6 (6): 2881–2894. doi:10.1021/bm050410l. ISSN 1525-7797. PMID 16283704.


This article is issued from Offline. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.