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      Innovative Approaches and Advances for Hair Follicle Regeneration

      1 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4
      ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering
      American Chemical Society (ACS)

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          Most cited references251

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          Alginate: properties and biomedical applications.

          Alginate is a biomaterial that has found numerous applications in biomedical science and engineering due to its favorable properties, including biocompatibility and ease of gelation. Alginate hydrogels have been particularly attractive in wound healing, drug delivery, and tissue engineering applications to date, as these gels retain structural similarity to the extracellular matrices in tissues and can be manipulated to play several critical roles. This review will provide a comprehensive overview of general properties of alginate and its hydrogels, their biomedical applications, and suggest new perspectives for future studies with these polymers.
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            Synthetic biomaterials as instructive extracellular microenvironments for morphogenesis in tissue engineering.

            New generations of synthetic biomaterials are being developed at a rapid pace for use as three-dimensional extracellular microenvironments to mimic the regulatory characteristics of natural extracellular matrices (ECMs) and ECM-bound growth factors, both for therapeutic applications and basic biological studies. Recent advances include nanofibrillar networks formed by self-assembly of small building blocks, artificial ECM networks from protein polymers or peptide-conjugated synthetic polymers that present bioactive ligands and respond to cell-secreted signals to enable proteolytic remodeling. These materials have already found application in differentiating stem cells into neurons, repairing bone and inducing angiogenesis. Although modern synthetic biomaterials represent oversimplified mimics of natural ECMs lacking the essential natural temporal and spatial complexity, a growing symbiosis of materials engineering and cell biology may ultimately result in synthetic materials that contain the necessary signals to recapitulate developmental processes in tissue- and organ-specific differentiation and morphogenesis.
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              Self-renewal, multipotency, and the existence of two cell populations within an epithelial stem cell niche.

              In adult skin, each hair follicle contains a reservoir of stem cells (the bulge), which can be mobilized to regenerate the new follicle with each hair cycle and to reepithelialize epidermis during wound repair. Here we report new methods that permit their clonal analyses and engraftment and demonstrate the two defining features of stem cells, namely self-renewal and multipotency. We also show that, within the bulge, there are two distinct populations, one of which maintains basal lamina contact and temporally precedes the other, which is suprabasal and arises only after the start of the first postnatal hair cycle. This spatial distinction endows them with discrete transcriptional programs, but surprisingly, both populations are growth inhibited in the niche but can self-renew in vitro and make epidermis and hair when grafted. These findings suggest that the niche microenvironment imposes intrinsic "stemness" features without restricting the establishment of epithelial polarity and changes in gene expression.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering
                ACS Biomater. Sci. Eng.
                American Chemical Society (ACS)
                2373-9878
                2373-9878
                May 08 2023
                April 10 2023
                May 08 2023
                : 9
                : 5
                : 2251-2276
                Affiliations
                [1 ]College of Food Science & Technology, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai 201306, P.R. China
                [2 ]Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Aquatic-Product Processing & Preservation, Shanghai 201306, China
                [3 ]Laboratory of Quality and Safety Risk Assessment for Aquatic Products on Storage and Preservation (Shanghai), Ministry of Agriculture, Shanghai 201306, China
                [4 ]National R&D Branch Center for Freshwater Aquatic Products Processing Technology (Shanghai), Shanghai 201306, China
                Article
                10.1021/acsbiomaterials.3c00028
                37036820
                9cc01a8e-c070-4322-ae03-6b1ee2469c9e
                © 2023

                https://doi.org/10.15223/policy-029

                https://doi.org/10.15223/policy-037

                https://doi.org/10.15223/policy-045

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