Term
reasons for tissue engineering |
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Definition
transplantation crisis, shortage of donor organs and tissues available transplant rejection |
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Term
what are the four basic tissue types |
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Definition
muscle tissue, nerve tissue, epithelial tissue, and connective tissue |
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Term
muscle tissue types and functions |
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Definition
skeletal (voluntary), smooth (involuntary), cardiac (only found in heart, involuntary) contracts for movement and support |
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Term
nerve tissue: types and functions |
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Definition
brain, spinal cord, nerves, gives signals to muscles, informs us of environmental conditions |
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Term
epithelial tissue: types and functions |
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Definition
lines our organs such as stomach lining, skin (epidermis) (endothelial - blood vessels) |
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Term
Three Essential Components of Tissue |
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Definition
cells, extracellular matrix, soluble factors |
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Term
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Definition
growth factors, hormones, cytokines, soluble gases |
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Term
cellular tissue engineering components |
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Definition
cells, scaffolds, extracellular signals = biological substitute |
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Term
example of natural scaffold |
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Definition
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Term
a method to promote blood supply structure |
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Definition
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Term
what prevents blood from coagulating in blood vessels? |
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Definition
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Term
why don't scaffolds work well in vascular tissue engineering? |
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Definition
smooth muscle is more easily growing than endothelial cells, scaffold gets covered with smooth muscle, and blood coagulates at the site |
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Term
can neurons divide/proliferate? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
make the environment conducive to regeneration |
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Term
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Definition
epidermis - top layer dermis hypodermis |
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Term
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Definition
top layer, not much ECM, densely packed |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
cells that create rapid growth, often scar tissue |
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Term
negative effects of fibroblasts in the heart |
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Definition
heart attack, tissue dies forever, fibroblasts create scar tissue, difficult to contract |
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Term
how do you know if you damaged the dermis? |
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Definition
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Term
formation of ECM - dynamic or static? |
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Definition
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Term
how do cells know to attach to a scaffold? |
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Definition
growth factors, cells will follow a growth factor gradient |
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Term
our ECM is hydrophillic, so why don't we dissolve? |
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Definition
strands are tangled and interwoven, no opportunity to dissolve |
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Term
connective tissue: types and functions |
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Definition
connects, supports, and protects other tissues, ligament, bone, tendon, blood, hair |
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Term
tissue engineering process |
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Definition
cell sourcing cell expansion and manipulation mechanical and molecular signalling cell seeding and ECM expression implantation of construct |
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Term
what was with that vacanti mouse? |
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Definition
they grew a human ear on the mouse's back |
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Term
why wouldn't the ear from the vacanti mouse function if implanted onto a human? |
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Definition
mouse epidermis would cause rejection -- xenograph (across species) cartilage cells were from a cow - very different from human cartilage |
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Term
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Definition
multiply constantly through life, high rate of death |
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Term
examples of renewing, labile cells |
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Definition
skin, intestinal epithelium, bone marrow |
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Term
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Definition
low rate of death and replication, divide following stimulation |
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Term
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Definition
lack any capacity to divide |
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Term
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Definition
new keratinocytes divide here and as they reproduce and make a structural protein called keratin, they are pushed upward until they die and form the outer skin layer |
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Term
Anatomy of the small intestine |
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Definition
crypt progenitors enterocytes goblet cells villi epithelial sheet |
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Term
crypt progenitors function |
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Definition
cells at bottom of wells in submucosa, divide every 12-16 hours, 200 cells per crypt every day |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
provide a mucus lining in the small intestine - keeps the intestine from digesting itself |
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Term
how long do cells live in the intestine? |
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Definition
cells reach the top of the villus and shed off in 5 days |
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Term
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Definition
in the small intestion - at the crypt bottoms secrete antimicrobial peptides and enzymes |
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Term
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Definition
in marrow cavity of bone, synthesizes blood |
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Term
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Definition
blood cells - plasma life of about 120 days |
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Term
examples of expanding (stable) cells |
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Definition
endothelium, fibroblasts, liver cells, smooth muscle cells |
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Term
examples of renewing (labile) cells |
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Definition
skin, intestinal epithelium, bone marrow |
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Term
examples of static (permanent) cells |
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Definition
heart muscle cells, neurons |
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Term
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Definition
autologous allogeneic xenogeneic |
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Term
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Definition
from the patient differentiated cells of same or other tissue type stem cells (e.g. from bone marrow, fat of other tissue, or saved from umbilical cord |
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Term
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Definition
from other human sources differentiated cells of same or other tissue type fetal stem cells embryonic stem cells |
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Term
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Definition
from a different species differentiated cells of same or other tissue type fetal stem cells embryonic stem cells |
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Term
autologous cells - pros and cons |
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Definition
pros: immunologically acceptable cons: not readily available, donor site morbidity |
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Term
allogeneic cells - pros and cons |
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Definition
pros: can be readily available cons: not always immunologically acceptable |
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Term
xenogeneic cells - pros and cons |
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Definition
cons: requires engineering immunological tolerance, potential animal virus transmission |
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Term
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Definition
self renewal, reproduce itself differentiation, differentiate into functional phenotypes |
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Term
symmetric division of stem cells |
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Definition
one stem cell divides into two stem cells |
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Term
asymmetric division of stem cells |
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Definition
one stem cell divides into one stem cell and one progenitor cell |
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Term
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Definition
can divide many times, can divide 2^30 |
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Term
is stem cell division rate high or low? |
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Definition
low - progenitor cells do most of the division |
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Term
what is the ratio of stem cells to all cells? |
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Definition
1 in 10 to 15 thousand cells |
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Term
what do you use to expand cells? |
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Definition
culture flask - flat bottom |
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Term
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Definition
when cells come in contact with each other, they stop proliferating this is generaly defective in cancer cells |
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Term
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Definition
glycoprotein in the ECM - binds to integrin proteins |
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Term
how do you spur on the correct cell differentiation? |
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Definition
correct environment - nerve cells need electrical stimulation, bone cells need mechanical stimulation |
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Term
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Definition
cells and scaffold structure that can be implanted into the body |
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Term
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Definition
must be slow enough to allow tissue infiltration - if it degrades too fast, tissue will lose its structure |
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Term
cartilage cells - why should you stent it? |
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Definition
cells not mature enough in the first 12 weeks to counter the forces by the skin in healing - it would lose shape |
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Term
why can't you put chondrocytes (cartilage cells) in the center of a scaffold? |
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Definition
necrosis due to lack of nutrition |
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Term
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Definition
cell homicide vs cell suicide, respectively |
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Term
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Definition
blood disease, not able to grow new healthy RBC - need a bone marrow transplant generally, bone marrow injected into the blood stream directly |
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Term
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Definition
stem cells that have the potential to become any cell type in the adult animal body, and any cells of the extra embryonic tissue (placenta and umbilical cord) |
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Term
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Definition
the potential to differentiate to all somatic cells (but not to those of the placenta and umbilical cord which is derived from a trophoblast) |
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Term
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Definition
stem cell that placenta and umbilical cord are differentiated from |
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Term
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Definition
stem cells that can only differentiate into a limited number of type (ex. trophoblasts) |
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Term
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Definition
pluripotent, derived from inner cell mass of blastocyst |
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Term
induced pluripotent stem cells |
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Definition
also known as iPS cells, adult cells that have been genetically programmed to an embryonic stem cell-like state |
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Term
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Definition
undifferentiated cells that are found in differentiated adult tissues ex) bone marrow, fat,blood,brain, and spinal cord, dental pulp, liver, skeletal muscle, pancreas, epidermis, mucosa of the digestive system |
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Term
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Definition
cord blood, amniotic fluid and placenta |
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Term
source of a totipotent stem cell |
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Definition
4 cell stage of a zygote - all four totipotent - after thi step, cells are pluripotent |
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Term
source of pluripotent stem cells |
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Definition
inner cell mass of blastocyst |
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Term
embryonic stem cells - pros |
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Definition
Pros: able to differentiate into all tissues in the adult body able to replicate indefinitely while retaining their undifferentiated pluripotent state ease of purification |
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Term
embryonic stem cells - cons |
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Definition
risk of teratoma formation - insufficient differentiation material of animal rejection - pathogen transmission immunologic rejection ethical concerns |
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Term
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Definition
encapsulated tumor with tissue or organ components resembling normal derivatives of all three germ layers undifferentiated ESCs can form teratomas after implantation |
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Term
what kind of cells can serve to make iPS cells |
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Definition
fibroblasts - all have the same genome - environmental factors and gene expression determine function |
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Term
true/false - it is difficult to purify adult stem cells |
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Definition
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Term
where do trophoblasts reside? |
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Definition
outer layer of the blastocyst |
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Term
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Definition
mass of cells in the inside of the blastocyst |
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Term
aintainense of pluripotency of ESCs |
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Definition
feeder cells - fibroblasts, and serum proteins remval of feeder cells, ESCs spontaneously differentiate into all three germ layers |
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Term
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Definition
give rise to all blood cell types - white blood cells (leukocytes), red blood cells (erythrocytes), and platelets (thrombocytes) |
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Term
mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) |
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Definition
give rise to a variety of cells from mesodermal lineages including chondrocyte, osteoblasts, fibroblasts, muscle cells, tendons, adipocytes (fat cells), endothelial cells |
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Term
endothelial progenitor cells |
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Definition
give rise to endothelial cells |
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Term
bone marrow transplant procedure |
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Definition
destroy diseased BM by chemotherapy and/or radiation infusion of healthy BM into patients bloodstream BM migrates into large cavities of the bones, begins producing normal blood cells genetic makeups must match |
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Term
what kind of cells do you use for a bone marrow transplant? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
endoderm, ectoderm, mesoderm |
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Term
mesenchumal stem cells - properties |
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Definition
immunoprivileged do not express immunologically relevant cell surface markers inhibit the proliferation of allogeneic T-cells in vitro an elicit no immune response after allogeneic or xenogeneic tranplantation readily isolated from various sites of the human body, especially from BM and adipose tissues expand in culture without differentiation fr 30-40 divisions |
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Term
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Definition
amniotic fluid and placenta cord blood |
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Term
amniotic flid and placental stem cells give rive to: |
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Definition
hematopoietic, mesnchymal, and pluripotent cells |
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Term
cord blood stem cells give rise to: |
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Definition
hematopoietic, pluripotent |
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Term
fetal stem cells, pros and cons |
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Definition
pros: ease of procurement, abundant source, higher capacity to proliferate, less immunogenic than adult stem cells, no ethical concerns cons: limited number of cells, immunogenic |
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Term
why can't we use the stem cells we have saves in research labs now |
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Definition
they are garbage because we mixed crap with them and they are unusable now |
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Term
modulation of extracellular environment |
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Definition
growth factors, hormone, extracellular matrix components |
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Term
modulation of intracellular environment through gene transfection |
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Definition
induce gene expression: gene transfection of transcription factors through DNA delivery silence gene expression SiRNA delivery |
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Term
conductive signal for regulation |
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Definition
scaffolds for supporting host tissue growth, ECM molecules |
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Term
inductive sigal for regulation |
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Definition
drug delivery of soluble factors |
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Term
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Definition
mimic ECM to support: cell adhesion cell differentiation cell proliferation |
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Term
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Definition
large surface area to volume ratio macroporous biocompatible mechanical properties specific 3D shape physical guidance or patterning: topographic cues degrade at the same rate as tissue deformation ability to incorporate drug releasing component |
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Term
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Definition
how many pores through a certain surface area, also how large the pores are - different sized pores for different cells |
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Term
mnufacturing porous scaffold |
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Definition
solvent casting and particulate leaching gas forming freeze drying rapid prototyping hydrogel |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
solvent casting and particulate leaching scaffold technique |
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Definition
salt particles, casting, vacuum dry, immerse in water extesively used for PLLA and PLGA scaffolds pros: pore size and porosity can be tuned by changing the particle size and the polymer/particle ratio cons: limited thickness cytotoxic organic solvent |
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Term
why are PLLA, PGA, and PLGA used commonly? |
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Definition
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Term
why are PLLA PGA, and PLGA not favored by tissue engineers? |
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Definition
hydrophobic, not great for applications |
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Term
gas forming - scaffold technique |
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Definition
gas creates the pores compression molding using a heated mold high pressure CO2 gas gas dissolved in the polymer closed pore morphology pros: no organic solvents cons: excessive heat prohibits incorporation of temperature labile materials into the polymer matrix pores do not form an interconnected structure |
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Term
freeze drying - scaffold technique |
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Definition
polymer dissolved in aqueous solution rapid cooling create phase separation solvents removal by sublimation under vacuum pros: no organic solvents and high temperature cons: porosity and pore size difficult to control |
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Term
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Definition
CAD design, 3D printing, three dimensional printing og scaffolds and cells pros: predefined properties, interconnetivity cons: slow slow slow |
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Term
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Definition
water swollen cross-linked polymeric structures either by covalent bonds or entanglements - hydrogen bonds |
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Term
hydrogels posses a degree of flexibility very similar to natural tissue BECAUSE |
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Definition
of their significant water content |
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Term
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Definition
chemical cross linking in hydrogel |
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Term
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Definition
physical entanglement of fibers |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
how can you tell a cell is pluripotent? |
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Definition
it can generate a cell from each germ layer |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
use of transcription factors to do what? |
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Definition
maniulate gene expression |
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Term
true/false - cells will not respond to injection of transcription factors into the media |
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Definition
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Term
how do you properly introduce transcription factors? |
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Definition
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Term
how are scaffolds without cells advantageous? |
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Definition
no rejection, increased shelf life |
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Term
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Definition
PLLA degrades slower, PGA degrade faster, PLGA is a copolymer |
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Term
disadvantages of PLLA and PGA |
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Definition
hydrophobic, only soluble in organic solvents |
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Term
fibrous scaffolds - technique |
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Definition
high voltage applied to polymer solution electrostatic repulsion counteracts the surface tension at a critical point, a thin fibrous stream is ejected solvent evaporation |
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Term
electrospinning - control factors |
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Definition
fiber diameter, porosity, and morphology can be controlled by applied voltage, viscosity, solution conductivity, and temperature |
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Term
fibrous scaffolds - traits |
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Definition
large surface area:volume ratio high porosity add strength to composites tubular (nerve, blood vessel, intestine solid |
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Term
fibrous scaffolds, application |
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Definition
wound repair, sutures skin tissue engineering cartilage tissue engineering cardiovascular |
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Term
mechanical properties of scaffolds |
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Definition
composed of polymers, ceramics, or composites select material that closely resembles properties of tissue it is to replace |
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Term
soft tissue - material used |
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Definition
natural and synthetic polymers |
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Term
hard tissues - material used |
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Definition
metals, ceramics, composites |
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Term
glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) |
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Definition
unbranched polysaccharide chains composed of repeating disaccharid units |
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Term
glycosaminoglycan examples |
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Definition
hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate (cartilage), dermatan sulfate, heparan sulfate, keratan sulfate |
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Term
GAGs are generally attached to _______ to form __________ |
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Definition
ECM proteins; proteoglycans |
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Term
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Definition
GAG chains bound to a core protein |
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Term
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Definition
tensile strength cell binding domain |
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Term
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Definition
resiliency and extensibility |
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Term
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Definition
attract water resistance to pressure |
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Term
why do GAGs attract water? |
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Definition
negative surface attracted positive ions, creates a concentration gradient, osmotic forces pulls water to the more concentrated areas around the GAGs |
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Term
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Definition
attract water, keep ECM cells hydrated, store growth factors, compressive strength |
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Term
glycoproteins role in ECM |
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Definition
binding domain for cells and ECM molecules |
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Term
what components of the ECM promote mechanical strength? |
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Definition
collagen, elastin, proteoglycans |
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Term
what components of the ECM promote cell binding? |
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Definition
collagen and glycoproteins |
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Term
two most important glycoproteins |
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Definition
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Term
fiber forming ECM molecules |
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Definition
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Term
space filling ECM molecules |
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Definition
glycoproteins and proteoglycans |
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Term
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Definition
transmembrane receptor on cells for binding ECM proteins |
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Term
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Definition
cell binding site on an ECM molecule |
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Term
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Definition
cell attachment site of many adhesive proteins, Arg - Gly - Asp combination of nucleic acids |
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Term
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Definition
cell adhesion nucleic acid sequence |
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Term
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Definition
enhances osteoblast adhesion but not endothelial cells or fibroblasts |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
vascular endothelial cell growth factor |
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Definition
VEGF, blood vessel formation |
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Term
fibroblast growth factor family |
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Definition
FGF, cell division, angiogenesis |
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Term
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Definition
NGF, neuron survival, neurite extension, neuron migration |
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Term
transforming growth factor beta |
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Definition
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Term
bone morphogenetic protein |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
hydrophobic nanoparticles/microspheres aqueous solution dropped into an organic solvent. Drops are collected from mixture and dropped into another solution, emulsifier |
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Term
hydrophobic nanoparticles/microspheres pros and cons |
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Definition
pros: controlled release rate, small or large particles, high entrapment proficiency cons: inflammatory, organic solvents, potential denaturation, low drug loading efficiency for hydrophillic drugs |
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Term
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Definition
ratio of weight of drug entrapped int a carrier system to the total drug added |
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Term
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Definition
ratio of the weight of the drug to the weigt of the total carrier system (drug plus polymer carrier) |
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Term
heparin binding growth factors |
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Definition
bFGF, GDNF, NGF, NT-3, PDGF, Sonic Hedgehog |
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Term
affinity based drug delivery pros and cons |
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Definition
pros: high drug entrapment efficiency, water based, stable sustained release cons: can only be used for growth factors that have binding affinity for heparin |
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