Photosynthetic biomaterials: A pathway towards autotrophic tissue engineering
Author
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Schenck, Thilo Ludwig
Author
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Hopfner, Úrsula
Author
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Chávez, Myra Noemi
Author
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Machens, Hans Günther
Author
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Somlai Schweiger, Ian Andreas
Author
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Giunta, Riccardo Enzo
Author
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Viola Bohne, Alexandra
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Nickelsen, Jörg
Author
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Allende Connelly, Miguel
Author
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Egaña, José Tomás
Admission date
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2015-07-27T15:03:07Z
Available date
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2015-07-27T15:03:07Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Acta Biomaterialia 15 (2015) 39–47
en_US
Identifier
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Doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2014.12.012
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132114
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Engineered tissues are highly limited by poor vascularization in vivo, leading to hypoxia. In order to overcome
this challenge, we propose the use of photosynthetic biomaterials to provide oxygen. Since photosynthesis
is the original source of oxygen for living organisms, we suggest that this could be a novel
approach to provide a constant source of oxygen supply independently of blood perfusion. In this study
we demonstrate that bioartificial scaffolds can be loaded with a solution containing the photosynthetic
microalgae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, showing high biocompatibility and photosynthetic activity
in vitro. Furthermore, when photosynthetic biomaterials were engrafted in a mouse full skin defect, we
observed that the presence of the microalgae did not trigger a native immune response in the host. Moreover,
the analyses showed that the algae survived for at least 5 days in vivo, generating chimeric tissues
comprised of algae and murine cells. The results of this study represent a crucial step towards the establishment
of autotrophic tissue engineering approaches and suggest the use of photosynthetic cells to
treat a broad spectrum of hypoxic conditions.