Oct 18, 2024  
Undergraduate Catalog 
    
Undergraduate Catalog
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BIOL 5427 - Tissue Engineering


Two hours lecture. Two hours laboratory per week. Four credit hours.

Tissue engineering (TE) is defined as the development and manipulation of laboratory-grown molecules, cells, tissues, or organs to replace and/or support the function of injured body parts. TE applies the principles and methods of biology, stem cell biology, immunology, life sciences, physical sciences, engineering, cell and drug delivery, nanobiotechnology, and bioinformatics to understand physiological systems and to modify and create cells and tissues for therapeutic applications. TE is highly interdisciplinary. TE has resulted in both clinically used and experimental therapies for structure tissue repair (e.g. skin, bone, cartilage, tendon, muscle, and blood vessel), for enhancing metabolic function (e.g. liver) for improved drug delivery (localized delivery of a drug), and as a vehicle for cell-based gene therapy.

Prerequisites: BIOL 20194 - (was 2401) Microbiology  and one of the following: BIOL 40694 - (was 4401) Cell Biology BIOL 41384 - (was 4413) Immunology BIOL 41784 - (was 4417) Molecular Biology , or BIOL 41984 - (was 4419) Plant Physiology .



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