Title of article
Macrophage responses to silk
Author/Authors
Bruce Panilaitis، نويسنده , , Gregory H. Altman، نويسنده , , Jingsong Chen، نويسنده , , Hyoung-Joon Jin، نويسنده , , Vassilis Karageorgiou، نويسنده , , David L. Kaplan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
7
From page
3079
To page
3085
Abstract
Silk fibers have potential biomedical applications beyond their traditional use as sutures. The physical properties of silk fibers and films make it a promising candidate for tissue engineering scaffold applications, particularly where high mechanical loads or tensile forces are applied or in cases where low rates of degradation are desirable. A critical issue for biomaterial scaffolds is biocompatibility. The direct inflammatory potential of intact silk fibers as well as extracts was studied in an in vitro system. The results indicate that silk fibers are largely immunologically inert in short- and long-term culture with RAW 264.7 murine macrophage cells while insoluble fibroin particles induced significant TNF release. Soluble sericin proteins extracted from native silk fibers did not induce significant macrophage activation. While sericin did not activate macrophages by itself, it demonstrated a synergistic effect with bacterial lipopolysaccharide. The low level of inflammatory potential of silk fibers makes them promising candidates in future biomedical applications.
Keywords
Silk , Sericin , Tissue engineering , biomaterial , inflammation , Fibroin , macrophage , Scaffold , TNF
Journal title
Biomaterials
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Biomaterials
Record number
544943
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