Litcius/Paper detail

Immunomodulatory Biomaterials: Tailoring Surface Properties to Mitigate Foreign Body Reaction and Enhance Tissue Regeneration

Hamed Amani, Mahdieh Alipour, Elahe Shahriari, Juan M. Taboas

2024Advanced Healthcare Materials74 citationsDOI

Abstract

The immune cells have demonstrated the ability to promote tissue repair by removing debris, breaking down the extracellular matrix, and regulating cytokine secretion profile. If the behavior of immune cells is not well directed, chronic inflammation and foreign body reaction (FBR) will lead to scar formation and loss of biomaterial functionality. The immunologic response toward tissue repair or chronic inflammation after injury and implantation can be modulated by manipulating the surface properties of biomaterials. Tailoring surface properties of biomaterials enables the regulation of immune cell fate such as adhesion, proliferation, recruitment, polarization, and cytokine secretion profile. This review begins with an overview of the role of immune cells in tissue healing and their interactions with biomaterials. It then discusses how the surface properties of biomaterials influence immune cell behavior. The core focus is reviewing surface modification methods to create innovative materials that reduce foreign body reactions and enhance tissue repair and regeneration by modulating immune cell activities. The review concludes with insights into future advancements in surface modification techniques and the associated challenges.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemBiomaterialRegeneration (biology)Extracellular matrixInflammationMaterials scienceWound healingForeign-body giant cellCell adhesionSurface modificationTissue repairCell biologyCytokineSecretionNanotechnologyAdhesionImmunologyMedicineChemistryBiologyPathologyInternal medicinePhysical chemistryComposite materialPolymer Surface Interaction StudiesTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineGraphene and Nanomaterials Applications