Issue 8, 2011

Emerging area: biomaterials that mimic and exploit protein motion

Abstract

Traditional dynamic hydrogels have been designed to respond to changes in physicochemical inputs, such as pH and temperature, for a wide range of biomedical applications. An emerging strategy that may allow for more specific “bio-responsiveness” in synthetic hydrogels involves mimicking or exploiting nature's dynamic proteins. Hundreds of proteins are known to undergo pronounced conformational changes in response to specific biochemical triggers, and these responses represent a potentially attractive toolkit for design of dynamic materials. This “emerging area” review focuses on the use of protein motions as a new paradigm for design of dynamic hydrogels. In particular, the review emphasizes early examples of dynamic hydrogels that harness well-known protein motions. These examples then serve as templates to discuss challenges and suggest emerging directions in the field. Successful early examples of this approach, coupled with the fundamental properties of nature's protein motions, suggest that protein-based materials may ultimately achieve specific, multiplexed responses to a range of biochemical triggers. Applications of this new class of materials include drug delivery, biosensing, bioactuation, and tissue engineering.

Graphical abstract: Emerging area: biomaterials that mimic and exploit protein motion

Article information

Article type
Emerging Area
Submitted
20 Nov 2010
Accepted
22 Dec 2010
First published
03 Feb 2011

Soft Matter, 2011,7, 3679-3688

Emerging area: biomaterials that mimic and exploit protein motion

W. L. Murphy, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 3679 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01351J

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