Chapter 9 – Emerging Biophysics Techniques 421
engineered in the absence of an artificial scaffold too, for example, skeletal muscle has been
engineered in vitro using stem cells and just providing the current cellular and extracellular
biochemical triggers; however, an artificial scaffold in general improves the efficiency of
stem cells ultimately differentiating into regenerated tissues. For example, artificial nanofiber
structures that mimic the native extracellular matrix can stimulate the adhesion of a range
of different cell types and thus act as tissue-engineered scaffolds for several different tissues,
which interface directly with the extracellular matrix, including bone, blood vessels, skin,
muscles (including the heart muscle), the front surface of the eye (known as the cornea), and
nerve tissue. Active research in this area involves the development of several new biohybrid/
non-biohybrid materials to use as nanofiber scaffolds. Modification of these nanofibers
involves chemically functionalizing the surface to promote binding of bioactive molecules
such as key enzymes and/or various important drugs.
In wounds, infections, and burn injuries, skin tissue engineering using biomimetics
approaches can be of substantial patient benefit. Nanofiber scaffolds can be both 2D and
3D. These can stimulate adhesion of injected stem cells and subsequently growth of new
skin tissue. Similarly, nanobiomimetic tissue-engineered blood vessels can be used to pro
mote adhesion of stem cells for stimulating growth of new blood vessels, which has been
demonstrated in major blood vessels, such as the main artery of the aorta. This involves more
complex growth of different types of cells than in skin, including both endothelial cells that
form the structure of the wall of the artery as well as smooth muscle cells that perform an
essential role in regulating the artery diameter and hence the blood flow rate. The efficacy of
these nanofiber implants again can be demonstrated using a range of biophysics tools, here,
for example, including Doppler ultrasound to probe the blood flow through the aorta and to
use x-ray spectroscopy on implant samples obtained from animal model organisms ex vivo.
Nanoscale particles and self-assembled synthetic biological nanostructures also have poten
tial applications as scaffolds for biomimetic tissue.
KEY POINT 9.4
There has been much speculative media coverage concerning bionanotechnology and
synthetic biology in general, both positive and negative in terms of potential benefits
and pitfalls. However, behind the hype, significant steady advances are being made in
areas of nanomedicine in particular, which have utilized the developments of modern
biophysics, and may pave the way to significant future health benefits.
9.4.3 DESIGNER DRUGS THROUGH IN SILICO METHODS
Bioinformatics modeling and molecular simulation tools (see Chapter 8) can now be
applied directly to problems of screening candidate new drugs on their desired targets
to enable the so-called in silico drug design. These simulation methods often combine ab
initio with classical simulation tools to probe the efficacy of molecular docking of such
candidate drugs. Such virtual screening of multiple candidate drugs can provide invalu
able help in homing in on the most promising of these candidates for subsequent experi
mental testing.
The results of these experimental assays, many of which involve biophysics techniques
discussed previously in this book, can then be fed back into refined computational modeling,
and the process is iterated. Similarly, however, undesirable interactions between candidate
new drugs and other cellular machinery benefit from in silico modeling approaches, for
example, to simulate toxicity effects through detrimental interactions with biomolecules that
are not the primary targets of the drug.
KEY BIOLOGICAL
APPLICATIONS:
PERSONALIZED
HEALTHCARE
TOOLS
Lab-on-a-chip devices; In
silico drug design.