Tissue engineering has offered unique opportunities for disease modeling and regenerative medicine; however, the success of these strategies is dependent on faithful reproduction of native cellular organization. Here, it is reported that ultrasound standing waves can be used to organize myoblast populations in material systems for the engineering of aligned muscle tissue constructs. Patterned muscle engineered using type I collagen hydrogels exhibits significant anisotropy in tensile strength, and under mechanical constraint, produced microscale alignment on a cell and fiber level. Moreover, acoustic patterning of myoblasts in gelatin methacryloyl hydrogels significantly enhances myofibrillogenesis and promotes the formation of muscle fiber...
The reproduction of reliable in vitro models of human skeletal muscle is made harder by the intrinsi...
The reproduction of reliable in vitro models of human skeletal muscle is made harder by the intrinsi...
Raw research data supporting the publication: Armstron, JPK et al., "Engineering anisotropic muscle...
Tissue engineering has offered unique opportunities for disease modelling and regenerative medicine,...
Tissue engineering has offered unique opportunities for disease modeling and regenerative medicine; ...
Many mammalian tissues have a specific cellular arrangement that enables their unique function. For ...
The ultimate objective of tissue engineering is to fabricate artificial living constructs with a str...
We present a new strategy for the fabrication of artificial skeletal muscle tissue with functional m...
<p>Transplantation of a functional engineered skeletal muscle substitute is a promising therapeutic ...
Tissue engineering methods that aim to mimic the hierarchical structure of skeletal muscle tissue ha...
A bioengineered skeletal muscle tissue as an alternative for autologous tissue flaps, which mimics ...
© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbHTissue engineering of skeletal muscle has been proposed as a potential regenera...
Engineered muscle tissues can be used for several different purposes, which include the production o...
Tissue engineering of skeletal muscle aims to replicate the parallel alignment of myotubes on the na...
To engineer tissue-like structures, cells must organize themselves into three-dimensional (3D) netwo...
The reproduction of reliable in vitro models of human skeletal muscle is made harder by the intrinsi...
The reproduction of reliable in vitro models of human skeletal muscle is made harder by the intrinsi...
Raw research data supporting the publication: Armstron, JPK et al., "Engineering anisotropic muscle...
Tissue engineering has offered unique opportunities for disease modelling and regenerative medicine,...
Tissue engineering has offered unique opportunities for disease modeling and regenerative medicine; ...
Many mammalian tissues have a specific cellular arrangement that enables their unique function. For ...
The ultimate objective of tissue engineering is to fabricate artificial living constructs with a str...
We present a new strategy for the fabrication of artificial skeletal muscle tissue with functional m...
<p>Transplantation of a functional engineered skeletal muscle substitute is a promising therapeutic ...
Tissue engineering methods that aim to mimic the hierarchical structure of skeletal muscle tissue ha...
A bioengineered skeletal muscle tissue as an alternative for autologous tissue flaps, which mimics ...
© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbHTissue engineering of skeletal muscle has been proposed as a potential regenera...
Engineered muscle tissues can be used for several different purposes, which include the production o...
Tissue engineering of skeletal muscle aims to replicate the parallel alignment of myotubes on the na...
To engineer tissue-like structures, cells must organize themselves into three-dimensional (3D) netwo...
The reproduction of reliable in vitro models of human skeletal muscle is made harder by the intrinsi...
The reproduction of reliable in vitro models of human skeletal muscle is made harder by the intrinsi...
Raw research data supporting the publication: Armstron, JPK et al., "Engineering anisotropic muscle...