Scaffolds for Liver Tissue Engineering
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Engineering
Abstract
Successful in vitro engineering of functional liver tissue has been a goal for tissue engineering research
to provide solutions to diseases such as liver disease which currently have no medical cure other than
organ transplantation. Initial successes in producing 3D liver tissue constructs arose through the
formation of hepatocyte spheroids[1]. However the size of these constructs will reach a critical size
before a lack in vascularisation results in reduced mass transport and cell viability decreases [2]. It is
widely thought that a solution to this problem is to design 3D porous scaffolds upon which a cell
culture can grow and form 3D tissue constructs. This document will briefly outline some of the current
research on scaffolds for liver tissue engineering and suggest some potential topics for further
research.
to provide solutions to diseases such as liver disease which currently have no medical cure other than
organ transplantation. Initial successes in producing 3D liver tissue constructs arose through the
formation of hepatocyte spheroids[1]. However the size of these constructs will reach a critical size
before a lack in vascularisation results in reduced mass transport and cell viability decreases [2]. It is
widely thought that a solution to this problem is to design 3D porous scaffolds upon which a cell
culture can grow and form 3D tissue constructs. This document will briefly outline some of the current
research on scaffolds for liver tissue engineering and suggest some potential topics for further
research.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Thomas Bate (Student) |
Studentship Projects
Project Reference | Relationship | Related To | Start | End | Student Name |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EP/N509644/1 | 30/09/2016 | 29/09/2021 | |||
2275011 | Studentship | EP/N509644/1 | 01/11/2017 | 29/09/2021 | Thomas Bate |