Hydrogel biomaterials: a smart future?
- PMID: 17697712
- PMCID: PMC2212614
- DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2007.07.044
Hydrogel biomaterials: a smart future?
Abstract
Hydrogels were the first biomaterials developed for human use. The state-of-the-art and potential for the future are discussed. Recently, new designs have produced mechanically strong synthetic hydrogels. Protein-based hydrogels and hybrid hydrogels containing protein domains present a novel advance; such biomaterials may self-assemble from block or graft copolymers containing biorecognition domains. One of the domains, the coiled coil, ubiquitously found in nature, has been used as an example to demonstrate the developments in the design of smart hydrogels. The application potential of synthetic, protein based, DNA based, and hybrid hydrogels bodes well for the future of this class of biomaterials.
Figures




References
-
- Wichterle O, Lím D. Hydrophilic gels for biological use. Nature. 1960;185:117–118.
-
- Kopeček J, Yang J. Hydrogels as smart materials. Polym Int. 2007
-
- Okumura Y, Ito K. The polyrotaxane gels: a topological gel by figure-of-eight cross-links. Adv Mat. 2001;13:485–487.
-
- Gong JP, Katsuyama Y, Kurokawa T, Osada Y. Double-network hydrogels with extremely high mechanical strength. Adv Mat. 2003;15:1155–1158.
-
- Haraguchi K, Takehisa T. Nanocomposite hydrogels: a unique organic-inorganic network structure with extraordinary mechanical, optical, and swelling/de-swelling properties. Adv Mat. 2002;14:1120–1124.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources