S-1
Functional Scaffold
for Tissue Engineering
Yoshiaki
HIRANO
Department of Applied Chemistry, Faculty of
Engineering, Osaka Institute of Technology.
Tissue
engineering aims to create new tissues and organs to replace those lost to
disease, trauma, or congenital defects. However, considerable instruction must
be given to the cells forming these new tissues if one is to create a tissue
structurally and functionally similar to the native tissue. Materials (Scaffold) play a key role in
virtually all tissue engineering approaches. Scaffold create and maintain a
space for tissue formation, provide mechanical support to the forming tissue,
deliver inductive molecules or cells to the site of interest, and provide cues
controlling the structure and function of the newly created. The cell-binding
domain of fibronectin and many other adhesive
proteins in ECM contains the peptide Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser
(RGDS), and this sequence is recognized by integrin
receptors.
An overview of techniques to present RGDS peptides from scaffold, and the utility of
these systems in engineering tissues in
vitro and in vivo is presented.