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Bioengineering: the interface between the living and the technological

Working with bioengineered tissues in the laboratory
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Bioengineering is a field that combines the principles of engineering, biology, chemistry, medicine, and materials science to create systems, devices, and solutions for working with living organisms. Its development is changing both fundamental scientific understanding of life and practical technologies in medicine, agriculture, pharmacy, and energy.

The structure of modern bioengineering

Bioengineering encompasses several technological platforms:

Genetic engineering
It is used for DNA editing, development of transgenic organisms, creation of therapeutic cells. Technologies CRISPR, TALEN, ZFN open up new possibilities for the treatment of hereditary and oncological diseases.

Cellular engineering
It involves growing cell structures in vitro for subsequent transplantation, drug testing, or disease modeling. The focus is on stem cells, iPS cells, and hybrid cell lines.

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Tissue engineering
Aims at creating biologically active structures that mimic body tissues: skin, cartilage, epithelium, bone tissue. Structures are created on scaffolds made of biocompatible materials (biopolymers, hydrogels).

Biomaterials
Development of materials that interact with living cells. They are used to create implants, scaffolds, and prostheses. They are characterized by biocompatibility, mechanical stability, and lack of toxicity.

Biomedical devices
Includes implants, neurostimulators, pacemakers, artificial organs. A sub-section is bioelectronics - the integration of biological tissues with electronic modules to control body functions.

3D bioprinting
The technology of layer-by-layer creation of biological structures using printers that work with cells, hydrogels, and biopolymers. Allows the production of tissue fragments, vessels, valves, and experimental organ models.

3D bioprinter prints artificial cartilage tissue

Applied areas in medicine

Regenerative medicine
The use of bioengineering technologies to restore organ functions after injuries or diseases. Artificial valves, blood vessels, retinas, and cartilage are created.

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Oncotherapy
Genetically modified immune cells (e.g. CAR-T) are being developed that recognize and destroy tumor cells.

Cardio- and neuroengineering
Electrically conductive scaffolds are being created that support the electrical activity of the heart or brain muscle. Such materials are used after heart attacks, strokes, and for Parkinson's disease.

Implantology
Bioengineering allows for the production of customized endo- and exo-prostheses, bone implants integrated into the patient's structure. Tissue components are sewn into 3D-printed implants to increase survival.

Agricultural and industrial applications

Agrobioengineering
Used to create high-yielding, drought-resistant or disease-resistant plants. Genetically modified crops have increased biomass, higher nutritional value, and resistance to pests.

Bioreactors and biofermenters
They are used in pharmacology, the food industry, and biofuel production. Bioengineering allows you to optimize the environment in which bacteria or yeast produce the necessary substances.

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Synthetic biology
Combines modeling of artificial cells, development of hybrid DNA constructs, and creation of biomolecular logic circuits. This allows cells to be programmed to perform specific functions (e.g., toxin detection).

Ethical and technical challenges

Despite the prospects, the industry faces a number of difficulties:

  • Uneven regulation of technology in different countries

  • The issue of embryo modification and patient consent

  • High cost of producing bioengineered products

  • The need for multi-level bioethical expertise

  • Risks of uncontrolled implementation without clinical evidence

Despite this, bioengineering continues to be integrated into interdisciplinary models of health, ecology, industry, and defense.

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