bioengineering

Storing energy and sequestering CO2 at the same time by going microbial
Wendy Kenigsberg/Cornell University Bioengineered microbes may one day be used to store the sun’s energy,
What if we could replace damaged blood vessels with brand new ones produced in a laboratory?
Made entirely from biological material, these blood vessels would have the advantage of being well
Solved: A major bioengineering problem blocking the regeneration of human tissues and organs

Researchers face a fundamental challenge as they seek to scale up human tissue regeneration from

Bioengineered Blood Vessel Appears Safe for Dialysis Patients and Becomes Human Tissue

Man-made blood vessels developed by researchers at Duke University, Yale University and the tissue engineering

Future Brain Therapies for Parkinson’s Possible with Stem Cell Bioengineering Innovation

Rutgers and Stanford scientists develop novel way to inject healthy human nerve cells into the

Functional heart muscle regenerated in decellularized human hearts as first steps to bioengineered human hearts

Mass. General team generates stem-cell derived heart muscle in cell-free human cardiac matrix Massachusetts General

Researchers unlock the mysteries of wound healing

A multidisciplinary research team discovers how cells know to rush to a wound and heal

Bioengineers put human hearts on a chip to aid drug screening

When UC Berkeley bioengineers say they are holding their hearts in the palms of their

Skin Cells Can Be Engineered Into Pulmonary Valves for Pediatric Patients

New valves may grow with patients and may have lower rejection rates Researchers have found

Sound engineering: complex sonotweezers can manipulate and arrange many small particles simultaneously - Professor Bruce Drinkwater, Bristol University
Levitating Cells with Ultrasonic Tweezers Provides a Sound Route to Bio-Engineering

Pioneering ‘tweezers’ that use ultrasound beams to grip and manipulate tiny clusters of cells under

This series of images shows the destruction and subsequent recovery of engineered muscle fibers that had been exposed to a toxin found in snake venom. This marks the first time engineered muscle has been shown to repair itself after implantation into a living animal.
Self-Healing Engineered Muscle Grown in the Laboratory

The engineers are now beginning work to see if their biomimetic muscle can be used

via Rice University
Bioengineers invent ‘light tube array,’ ‘bioscilloscope’ to test, debug genetic circuits

Rice synthetic biologists shine light on genetic circuit analysis In a significant advance for the

via IO9
Medical breakthrough could lead to functional artificial skin

Swiss researchers have achieved a major breakthrough in the development of bioengineered skin. The new

Surgeons at Duke University Hospital Implant Bioengineered Vein

In a first-of-its-kind operation in the United States, a team of doctors at Duke University

Bioengineers print ears that look and act like the real thing

  Cornell bioengineers and physicians have created an artificial ear that looks and acts like