4.5 Review

Recent developments in mussel-inspired materials for biomedical applications

Journal

BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 20, Pages 6653-6672

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1bm01126j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL140951, HL137193]

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Researchers have been striving to synthesize and modify nature-inspired biomaterials to address challenges in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering, focusing on biocompatibility and cellular interactions. Mussel-inspired biomaterials, with catechol modification, exhibit desirable properties such as loading bioactive molecules, strong adhesion, and self-healing capabilities, leading to increased interest in their production and applications. The use of polydopamine coating and catechol conjugation with polymers for biomedical applications, like drug delivery and tissue regeneration, shows promise for the development of mussel-inspired materials.
Over the decades, researchers have strived to synthesize and modify nature-inspired biomaterials, with the primary aim to address the challenges of designing functional biomaterials for regenerative medicine and tissue engineering. Among these challenges, biocompatibility and cellular interactions have been extensively investigated. Some of the most desirable characteristics for biomaterials in these applications are the loading of bioactive molecules, strong adhesion to moist areas, improvement of cellular adhesion, and self-healing properties. Mussel-inspired biomaterials have received growing interest mainly due to the changes in mechanical and biological functions of the scaffold due to catechol modification. Here, we summarize the chemical and biological principles and the latest advancements in production, as well as the use of mussel-inspired biomaterials. Our main focus is the polydopamine coating, the conjugation of catechol with other polymers, and the biomedical applications that polydopamine moieties are used for, such as matrices for drug delivery, tissue regeneration, and hemostatic control. We also present a critical conclusion and an inspired view on the prospects for the development and application of mussel-inspired materials.

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