DocumentCode
710823
Title
Programmable materials for protein delivery and regenerative medicine
Author
Yong Wang
Author_Institution
Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA
fYear
2015
fDate
17-19 April 2015
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
1
Abstract
Summary form only given. Human tissues dynamically change their properties in response to environmental stimulation. Great effort has been made to develop synthetic materials with the ability to recapitulate the dynamic nature of natural tissues for drug delivery and regenerative medicine. While significant progress have been achieved, it remains a challenge to develop materials whose multiple functions and properties can be molecularly regulated at the right time at the right frequency for the right duration. This presentation will introduce how to develop programmable aptamer-functionalized hydrogels and how the functionalities of these hydrogels are specifically regulated with high fidelity at the DNA and protein levels. Our data have shown that aptamers could be effectively incorporated into hydrogels and that the incorporation of aptamers into hydrogels did not compromise the capability of aptamers in recognizing target molecules. Importantly, the aptamers were able to hold protein drugs with high binding strength and specificity. With the rational design of aptamer sequences, different release kinetics could be achieved. We believe that these programmable hydrogels hold great potential for a variety of biomedical applications ranging from drug delivery to regenerative medicine.
Keywords
DNA; biochemistry; biological tissues; biomedical materials; biomimetics; bonds (chemical); composite materials; drug delivery systems; drugs; hydrogels; intelligent materials; materials preparation; molecular biophysics; molecular configurations; proteins; DNA level fidelity; aptamer incorporation; biomedical application; drug delivery; environmental stimulation response; human tissue properties; hydrogel functionality regulation; material function regulation; material property regulation; molecular regulation; natural tissue dynamic nature; programmable aptamer-functionalized hydrogel development; programmable material; protein delivery; protein drug binding specificity; protein drug binding strength; protein level fidelity; rational aptamer sequence design; regenerative medicine; release kinetics; synthetic material development; target molecule recognition;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Biomedical Engineering Conference (NEBEC), 2015 41st Annual Northeast
Conference_Location
Troy, NY
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-8358-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NEBEC.2015.7117062
Filename
7117062
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