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High-Throughput Routes to Biomaterials Discovery

Mohammad Soheilmoghaddam, Madeleine Rumble, Justin J. Cooper‐White

2021Chemical Reviews66 citationsDOI

Abstract

Many existing clinical treatments are limited in their ability to completely restore decreased or lost tissue and organ function, an unenviable situation only further exacerbated by a globally aging population. As a result, the demand for new medical interventions has increased substantially over the past 20 years, with the burgeoning fields of gene therapy, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine showing promise to offer solutions for full repair or replacement of damaged or aging tissues. Success in these fields, however, inherently relies on biomaterials that are engendered with the ability to provide the necessary biological cues mimicking native extracellular matrixes that support cell fate. Accelerating the development of such "directive" biomaterials requires a shift in current design practices toward those that enable rapid synthesis and characterization of polymeric materials and the coupling of these processes with techniques that enable similarly rapid quantification and optimization of the interactions between these new material systems and target cells and tissues. This manuscript reviews recent advances in combinatorial and high-throughput (HT) technologies applied to polymeric biomaterial synthesis, fabrication, and chemical, physical, and biological screening with targeted end-point applications in the fields of gene therapy, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine. Limitations of, and future opportunities for, the further application of these research tools and methodologies are also discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Regenerative medicineTissue engineeringNanotechnologyBiochemical engineeringBiomaterialFunction (biology)Cell functionRegeneration (biology)PopulationRisk analysis (engineering)ChemistryBiomedical engineeringEngineeringCellMedicineMaterials scienceBiologyBiochemistryEvolutionary biologyCell biologyEnvironmental health3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing TechnologiesInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques Innovation
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