Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/20614

TítuloSugars: burden or biomaterials of the future?
Autor(es)Pashkuleva, I.
Reis, R. L.
Data2010
EditoraRoyal Society of Chemistry
RevistaJournal of Materials Chemistry
CitaçãoPashkuleva, I., & Reis, R. L. (2010). Sugars: burden or biomaterials of the future?. Journal of Materials Chemistry. Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). http://doi.org/10.1039/c0jm01605e
Resumo(s)During the past few years, the field of tissue engineering (TE) has been shifting from replacement to regenerative strategies. Following this tendency, the requirements for biomaterials to be used in TE have been also changing. While a few decades ago bioinert materials that do not provoke undesired body responses were in the focus of material sciences, nowadays third generation biomaterials mimicking the nanoscale mechanisms of the interactions between cells and their in vivo environment are the target of material design. Although these mechanisms involve different bioactive molecules, until now mainly strategies involving small peptide epitopes that copycat specific sequences of complex proteins have been exploited. The breakthroughs that such approaches brought to biomaterials and TE fields are undeniable. Nevertheless, the important role that carbohydrates play in tissue structuring and function is still poorly explored and exploited in this context and we believe that this is one of the missing pieces in the TE puzzle. Carbohydrates are an integral part of our life. We are literally covered by them: from bacteria to mammalian cells, the molecular landscape of the cell surface is coated with sugars forming the so-called glycocalyx. This strategic placement of the sugars makes them crucial for the development, growth, function and/or survival of an organism. It is believed that the structural diversity of carbohydrates is the key for understanding and controlling those processes because of the huge number of ligand structures, which sugars can display in molecular recognition systems. However, their main advantages: the intricacy and the large natural diversity have turned against the scientists and have hampered their study. As a result, the field of glycomics is much less developed compared to its counterparts genomics and proteomics within TE. Recent advances in carbohydrate synthesis, sensing technologies and processing methodologies are inducing rapid changes in this field and will be discussed in this pa
TipoArtigo
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/20614
DOI10.1039/c0jm01605e
ISSN0959-9428
Versão da editorahttp://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2010/jm/c0jm01605e
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso aberto
Aparece nas coleções:3B’s - Artigos em revistas/Papers in scientific journals

Ficheiros deste registo:
Ficheiro Descrição TamanhoFormato 
file.pdf671,27 kBAdobe PDFVer/Abrir

Partilhe no FacebookPartilhe no TwitterPartilhe no DeliciousPartilhe no LinkedInPartilhe no DiggAdicionar ao Google BookmarksPartilhe no MySpacePartilhe no Orkut
Exporte no formato BibTex mendeley Exporte no formato Endnote Adicione ao seu ORCID