Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 3Unlocking the Biological Potential of Emulsion-Templated Matrices Through Surface Engineering for Biomedical Applications(Elsevier Sci Ltd, 2025) Sert, Emircan; Ozmen, Ece; Owen, Robert; Dikici, Betul AldemirEmulsion templating is a highly advantageous route for the fabrication of porous materials, enabling the development of matrices with high porosity, high interconnectivity, and precise morphological control. Synthetic polymers are most widely used in the fabrication of emulsion-templated tissue engineering scaffolds due to their superior mechanical strength, ease of fabrication, control over polymer properties, and batch-to-batch stability. The biological response is strongly associated with the surface properties of the biomaterials; however, scaffolds constructed from synthetic polymers often lack cell recognition sites and exhibit limited bioactivity. Thus, synthetic polymer-based porous matrices commonly require surface post-modification to improve cell adhesion, proliferation, migration, gene expression, and differentiation processes. To date, extensive work has been carried out investigating surface modification of scaffolds fabricated via traditional scaffold fabrication techniques. Still, studies addressing the post-modification of emulsion-templated matrices are comparatively limited despite an exponential increase in the number of publications on emulsion templating for tissue engineering in recent years. This review will first examine the fundamentals of emulsion templating, then describe cell adhesion and the characteristics of scaffolds that influence cell-material interactions. It will then provide a comprehensive analysis of surface modification techniques and recent advancements in surface-modified emulsion-templated matrices for tissue engineering applications. Finally, we address the challenges and future directions in this rapidly evolving field. We anticipate that this comprehensive literature review will present the current state-of-the-art and serve as a valuable roadmap for researchers seeking to enhance the biological performance of their emulsion-templated scaffolds through surface modifications. Such scaffold optimisation strategies not only improve cell-material interactions but also hold translational potential for advancing human healthcare through more effective regenerative therapies.Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 4Surface Modification Via Alkali Treatment and Its Effect on the Physicochemical and Biological Properties of Emulsion Templated Scaffolds(Elsevier Sci Ltd, 2025) Kocagoz, Mehmet; Tihminlioglu, Funda; Dikici, Betul AldemirEmulsion templating is an advantageous scaffold fabrication technique that provides high interconnectivity, high porosity, and control of the scaffold architecture. Polymerised emulsions with an internal phase ratio greater than 74 % are named Polymerised High Internal Phase Emulsions (PolyHIPEs). Polycaprolactone (PCL) is a synthetic, biodegradable, and biocompatible polymer widely used in tissue engineering, but the material-cell interaction of PCL-based biomaterials has been found to be limited due to the material's high hydrophobicity. This study aims to develop emulsion-templated polycaprolactone tetramethacrylate (4PCLMA)-based scaffolds and improve their biological performance using an alkaline surface modification method. For this purpose, 4PCLMA was successfully synthesised, and highly porous scaffolds were developed. PolyHIPEs were incubated in three different sodium hydroxide (NaOH) concentrations for three different incubation times. Chemical, morphological, mechanical characterisation, mass loss, water absorption capacity, water contact angle, Brunauer-Emmett-Teller analyses and biological investigations were conducted on NaOH-treated scaffolds in comparison with the control. The chemical changes induced by NaOH treatment in PolyHIPEs were confirmed by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. NaOH treatment increased the water absorption capacity, hydrophilicity, surface area, and protein adsorption but decreased the weight and mechanical strength of the scaffolds. In vitro results showed that NaOH treatment did not cause cytotoxicity in L929 cells and positively affected the cell adhesion and proliferation behaviour of Saos-2 cells. This study suggests surface modification of biodegradable synthetic polymer-based PolyHIPEs by NaOH treatment as a simple, scalable and cost-effective approach to enhance cell-material interactions of the material without causing a significant change in the overall morphology, contributing to the advancement of next-generation healthcare technologies.Review Citation - WoS: 17Citation - Scopus: 16Engineering Periodontal Tissue Interfaces Using Multiphasic Scaffolds and Membranes for Guided Bone and Tissue Regeneration(Elsevier, 2024) Özkendir, Özge; Karaca, İlayda; Çullu, Selin; Yaşar, Hüsniye Nur,; Erdoğan, Oğulcan; Dikici, Serkan; Dikici, Betul AldemirPeriodontal diseases are one of the greatest healthcare burdens worldwide. The periodontal tissue compartment is an anatomical tissue interface formed from the periodontal ligament, gingiva, cementum, and bone. This multifaceted composition makes tissue engineering strategies challenging to develop due to the interface of hard and soft tissues requiring multiphase scaffolds to recreate the native tissue architecture. Multilayer constructs can better mimic tissue interfaces due to the individually tuneable layers. They have different characteristics in each layer, with modulation of mechanical properties, material type, porosity, pore size, morphology, degradation properties, and drug-releasing profile all possible. The greatest challenge of multilayer constructs is to mechanically integrate consecutive layers to avoid delamination, especially when using multiple manufacturing processes. Here, we review the development of multilayer scaffolds that aim to recapitulate native periodontal tissue interfaces in terms of physical, chemical, and biological characteristics. Important properties of multiphasic biodegradable scaffolds are highlighted and summarised, with design requirements, biomaterials, and fabrication methods, as well as post-treatment and drug/growth factor incorporation discussed.
