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related materials Evolving
terminology for emerging technologies Comments? Questions?
Revisions? mchitty@healthtech.com Last revised November 03, 2001 View a Printer-Friendly Version of this Web Page! Related glossaries include Cell
biology, Miniaturization. biocompatible materials: Synthetic or natural materials, other than drugs, that are used to replace or repair any body tissue or bodily function.
[MeSH] Related term biomaterials bioengineering: Is rooted in physics, mathematics, chemistry, biology, and the life sciences. It is the application of a systematic, quantitative, and integrative way of thinking about and approaching the solutions of problems important to biology, medical research, clinical proactive, and population studies. The NIH Bioengineering Consortium agreed on the following definition for bioengineering research on biology, medicine, behavior, or health recognizing that no definition could completely eliminate overlap with other research disciplines or preclude variations in interpretation by different individuals and organizations. Integrates physical, chemical, or mathematical sciences and engineering principles for the study of biology, medicine, behavior, or health. It advances fundamental concepts, creates knowledge for the molecular to the organ systems levels, and develops innovative biologics, materials, processes, implants, devices, and informatics approaches for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, for patient rehabilitation, and for improving health.
[NIH, Office of External Research, Bioengineering Definition Committee, July 24,
1997] http://grants.nih.gov/grants/becon/bioengineering_definition.htm biomaterials: Synthetic or natural materials that
can replace or augment tissues, organs or body functions. Related term: biocompatible
materials, biopolymers biomechanics: Mechanical structures of living
organisms (especially muscles and bones). biomimetic: Biomimetic refers to human-made
processes, substances, devices, or systems that imitate nature. The art and
science of designing and building biomimetic apparatus is called biomimetics,
and is of special interest to researchers in nanotechnology, robotics,
artificial intelligence (AI), the medical industry, and the military. Some biomimetic processes have been in use for years. An example is the
artificial synthesis of certain vitamins and antibiotics. More recently,
biomimetics have been suggested as applicable in the design of machine
vision systems, machine hearing systems, signal amplifiers, navigational
systems, and data converters. The neural network (which has suffered through
on-again, off-again status in the opinions of prominent researchers) is a
hypothetical biomimetic computer that works by making associations and educated
guesses, and that can learn from its own mistakes. Other possible applications of biomimetics include nanorobot antibodies that
seek and destroy disease- causing bacteria, artificial organs, artificial arms,
legs, hands, and feet, and various electronic devices. One of the more
intriguing ideas is the so- called biochip,
a microprocessor that grows from a starter crystal in much the same way that a
seed grows into a tree, or a fertilized egg grows into an embryo. [whatis.com] Related terms biopolymers; Drug
discovery & development molecular mimicry, peptidomimetic, Gene
amplification & PCR PCR, PNA; glycomimetic, molecular imprinting biomolecular materials: An emerging discipline, materials
whose properties are abstracted from biology. They share many of the
characteristics of biological materials but are not necessarily of biological
origin. For example, they may be inorganic materials that are organized or
processed in a biomimetic fashion. A key feature of biological and biomolecular
materials is their ability to undergo self- assembly.
[Biomolecular self-assembling materials, National Academy of Sciences
1996] http://www.nas.edu/bpa/reports/bmm/bmm.html#PBMM biomotors: Driven by energy
sources such as adenosine triphosphate (ATP) for chemical transduction and other
processes. These biomotors are considered to be biomolecular and are discussed
in the body of this report, but strictly speaking they do not conform to the
panel's definition of self- assembly.
[Biomolecular self- assembling materials, National Academy of Sciences
1996] http://www.nas.edu/bpa/reports/bmm/bmm.html#PBMM biopolymers: Broader term polymers blood & blood substitutes: Human blood, plasma and tissue contain many proteins, the extraction and purification of which are of great medical and economic importance. Transmission of infectious diseases via blood transfusion, tissue implantation and the use of processed blood plasma and components have placed a high priority on the development of new strategies for safeguarding the health of millions of patients who receive blood and
tissue- derived products every year. The screening of blood for the detection of infectious agents is continuing to advance but is complicated by the presence new and emerging pathogens. In addition,
cost- effectiveness and the threat of emerging
and/ or crossover infective agents must also be considered. Blood
Product Safety Feb. 4-6, 2002 Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies
Feb. 6-7, 2002 Washington, DC bovine spongiform encephalopathy BSE: See under blood &
blood substitute combinatorial biology: Involves genetic manipulation of bacteria
and fungi that produce complex natural products. This technology includes
construction of large libraries of recombinant microbes capable of generating
novel organic molecules and engineering secondary metabolite biosynthetic pathways to modify valuable biologically active microbial metabolites.
[ASB [Am Soc. Biomechanics] Newsletter, June 1998] http://asb-biomech.org/newsletter/V11N1/guest.html fibrin: A protein derived from FIBRINOGEN in the presence of
THROMBIN, which forms part of the blood clot.
[MeSH] fibrin adhesive: See fibrin sealant, fibrin tissue adhesive.
fibrin glue: See fibrin sealant,, fibrin tissue adhesive.
fibrin sealant : A biologic product consisting of the final components of the clotting cascade, that can be applied locally to help stop bleeding. Fibrin sealant is usually applied in two components, one containing
thrombin and one containing fibrinogen, that are applied simultaneously to form a clot.
[Aventis Behring Canada Glossary] http://www.aventisbehring.com/canada/Med/ReferenceRoom/Glossary/English/defmed_gls1.asp fibrin tissue adhesive: An autologous or commercial tissue adhesive containing
fibrinogen and thrombin. The commercial product is a two component system from human plasma that contains more than fibrinogen and thrombin. The first component
contains highly concentrated fibrinogen, Factor VIII, fibronectin, and traces of other plasma proteins. The second component contains thrombin, calcium chloride, and antifibrinolytic agents such as aprotinin. Mixing of the two components promotes clotting and the formation and
cross- linking of fibrin. The tissue adhesive is used for tissue sealing,
hemostasis, and wound healing. [MeSH] fibrinogen: Plasma glycoprotein clotted by
thrombin, composed of a dimer of three non- identical pairs of polypeptide chains (alpha, beta, gamma) held together by disulfide bonds. Fibrinogen clotting is a
sol- gel change involving complex molecular arrangements: whereas fibrinogen is cleaved by thrombin to form
polypeptides A and B, the proteolytic action of other enzymes yields different fibrinogen degradation
products. [Mesh] A plasma protein that, when activated by thrombin, becomes fibrin, the principle component of a blood clot.
[Aventis Behring Canada Glossary] http://www.aventisbehring.com/canada/Med/ReferenceRoom/Glossary/English/defmed_gls1.asp genetic engineering: Directed modification of the gene complement of a living organism by such techniques as altering the DNA, substituting genetic material by means of a virus, transplanting whole nuclei, transplanting cell hybrids, etc.
[MeSH] Related term recombinant DNA technology. [IUPAC Compendium] MatML Materials Markup Language: Materials property data
distributed on the World Wide Web in documents using hypertext markup language
["What is MatML? National Institute of Standards and Technology] http://www.ceramics.nist.gov/matml/matml.htm materials science:
Science of ceramics, glass, metals, plastics, semiconductors. molecular motors: Miniaturization
glossary molecular self-assembly: Molecular self- assembly in
biological structures is highly specific and fundamental to the correct
functioning of an organism. The ability of this process to achieve the fine
geometric control of biological and biomimetisc systems, when understood
and harnessed, will have wide application.... Fabrication techniques originating
in solid- state electronics can be combined with covalent and self- assembly
molecular chemistry to produce biocompatible, biofunctional structures with
controlled geometry and function. ... There will come a point at which it no
longer makes sense to try to prepare the tiny components by paring down [top-
down] lumps of bulk matter. It will be more efficient to build components from
the bottom up, from assemblies of individual molecules. Within the last decade, an entirely new kind of synthetic
organic chemistry has been developed based on the use of molecular self-
assembly. Lithographic techniques (i.e., ways of reproducing structures from a
master, as in printing or etching) have been adapted from semiconductor
and solid state electronics methodology in order to prepare assemblies on
surfaces with nanometer- scale features. A combination of chemical self-
assembly with this new lithographic technology has made it possible to produce
biocompatible surface structures on a nanoscale (i.e., close to the size of
natural biological systems). The functioning of natural systems depends on very
elegant control of the relative geometries of the different components. Standard
examples include: the neurotransmitter/synaptic junction in nerve conduction;
the photosynthetic reaction center for conversion of light energy to electrical
energy; Rhodopsin and its assembly into rod cells to permit vision based on
straightforward organic sterochemical change; ion channels for feeding cells,
cell function induction, and nerve conduction; and finally, hemoglobin and its
reversible binding of oxygen and carbon monoxide. The biomimetic
properties of molecular self-assembly make this technology one of the newest and
most powerful preparative techniques of chemistry, and one with wide future
applications in health- related fields as well as other areas. [Dept. of
Chemistry, Northwestern Univ. US "Nanofabrication and Molecular Self-
Assembly" NanoWeb] http://www.chem.northwestern.edu/NanoWeb/intro.html molecularly imprinted polymers MIPs: A new class of
materials that have artificially created receptor structures. Since their
discovery in 1972, MIPs have attracted considerable interest from scientists and
3engineers involved with the development of chromatographic absorbents,
membranes, sensors and enzyme and receptor mimics. [S. Piletsky et. al.
"Molecular imprinting: at the edge of the third millennium" Trends in
Biotechnology 19 (1): 9- 12, Jan. 2001] polymers: Biomolecules glossary recombinant DNA technology: A body of techniques for cutting apart and splicing together different pieces of
DNA. When segments of foreign DNA are transferred into another cell or organism, the substance for which they code may be produced along with substances coded for by the native genetic material of the cell or organism. Thus, these cells become "factories" for the production of the
protein coded for by the inserted DNA.
[NIGMS] Related terms biotechnology, gene manipulation, genetic
engineering; Cell biology clones, homologous
recombination, vectors robotics: Drug discovery
& development glossary self-assembling biomolecular materials: Examples
of self-assembly include protein folding, the formation of liposomes, and the
alignment of liquid crystals. While this type of equilibrium self- assembly is
the central focus of this report, it is important to emphasize that much
biological assembly is also driven by energy sources such as adenosine
triphosphate (ATP), which power biomotors
[Biomolecular self- assembling materials, National Academy of Sciences
1996] http://www.nas.edu/bpa/reports/bmm/bmm.html#PBMM
Broader term self-assembly. self-assembly: <biology> A
process in which supramolecular hierarchical organization is established without
external intervention.... The approaches used can be expected to fall into two
general categories. The first involves directly mimicking biological systems or
processes to produce materials with enhanced properties. An example of this
approach is the use of molecular genetic techniques to produce polymers with
unprecedentedly uniform molecular length. The second category involves studying
how nature accomplishes a task or creates a structure with unusual properties,
and then applying similar techniques in a completely different context or using
completely different materials. [Biomolecular self-assembling materials,
National Academy of Sciences 1996] http://www.nas.edu/bpa/reports/bmm/bmm.html#PBMM
Narrower term self- assembling biomolecular materials. stem cells: Cell biology glossary thrombin : The enzyme that converts fibrinogen to fibrin to
form a blood clot. Thrombin circulates in the inactive form, prothrombin.
[Aventis Behring Canada Glossary] http://www.aventisbehring.com/canada/Med/ReferenceRoom/Glossary/English/stumed_gls6.asp tissue engineering: The
term "tissue engineering" was coined at an NSF [National Science
Foundation] -sponsored meeting in 1987. At a later NSF- sponsored workshop,
tissue engineering was defined as "...the application of principles and
methods of engineering and life sciences toward fundamental understanding ...and
development of biological substitutes to restore, maintain and improve [human]
tissue functions." This
definition is intended to include procedures where the biological substitutes
are cells or combinations of different cells that may be implanted on a scaffold
such as natural collagen or as synthetic, biocompatible polymers to form a
tissue. ["Tissue Engineering" National Science Foundation] http://www.nsf.gov/od/lpa/nsf50/nsfoutreach/htm/n50_z2/pages_z3/45_pg.htm Related term Cell biology cell patterning tissue sealants: Includes a variety of materials including fibrin
sealants, collagen and thrombin, cyanoacrylates, polyethylene glycol polymers, and
cross- linked albumin Surgical
Applications of Tissue Sealants & Adhesives Oct. 6-7, 2001, New Orleans,
LA Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies TSE: See under
blood & blood substitutes xenografts: Bibliography [Pittsburgh] Tissue Engineering Initiative, Glossary, 2000, 73
terms http://www.ptei.org/about_te/glossary.html Alpha glossary index IUPAC definitions are reprinted with the permission of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
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