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Dive into the research topics where Adam D. Celiz is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam D. Celiz.


Nature Materials | 2014

Materials for stem cell factories of the future

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; David A. Winkler; David A. Barrett; Martyn C. Davies; Lorraine E. Young; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

Polymeric substrates are being identified that could permit translation of human pluripotent stem cells from laboratory-based research to industrial-scale biomedicine. Well-defined materials are required to allow cell banking and to provide the raw material for reproducible differentiation into lineages for large-scale drug-screening programs and clinical use. Yet more than 1 billion cells for each patient are needed to replace losses during heart attack, multiple sclerosis and diabetes. Producing this number of cells is challenging, and a rethink of the current predominant cell-derived substrates is needed to provide technology that can be scaled to meet the needs of millions of patients a year. In this Review, we consider the role of materials discovery, an emerging area of materials chemistry that is in large part driven by the challenges posed by biologists to materials scientists.


Science | 2017

Tough adhesives for diverse wet surfaces

Jianyu Li; Adam D. Celiz; Joy T. Yang; Q. Yang; Isaac Wamala; William Whyte; B. R. Seo; Nikolay V. Vasilyev; Joost J. Vlassak; Zhigang Suo; David J. Mooney

Sticky even when wet Tissue adhesives are used as an alternative to stitches or staples and can be less damaging to the healthy tissues. But they can suffer from low biocompatibility and poor matching of the mechanical properties with the tissues. Li et al. combined an adhesive surface with a flexible matrix to develop an adhesive that has the right level of stick but moves with the surrounding tissues. The adhesive is effective in the presence of blood and thus might work during wound repair. Science, this issue p. 378 Tough adhesives stick to wet surfaces and show compatibility with blood exposure and dynamic movements. Adhesion to wet and dynamic surfaces, including biological tissues, is important in many fields but has proven to be extremely challenging. Existing adhesives are cytotoxic, adhere weakly to tissues, or cannot be used in wet environments. We report a bioinspired design for adhesives consisting of two layers: an adhesive surface and a dissipative matrix. The former adheres to the substrate by electrostatic interactions, covalent bonds, and physical interpenetration. The latter amplifies energy dissipation through hysteresis. The two layers synergistically lead to higher adhesion energies on wet surfaces as compared with those of existing adhesives. Adhesion occurs within minutes, independent of blood exposure and compatible with in vivo dynamic movements. This family of adhesives may be useful in many areas of application, including tissue adhesives, wound dressings, and tissue repair.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Discovery of a Novel Polymer for Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Expansion and Multilineage Differentiation

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Asha K. Patel; Andrew L. Hook; Divya Rajamohan; Vinoj George; Luke Flatt; Minal J. Patel; Vidana Epa; Taranjit Singh; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; Nicholas Denby Allen; David C. Hay; David A. Winkler; David A. Barrett; Martyn C. Davies; Lorraine E. Young; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

A scalable and cost‐effective synthetic polymer substrate that supports robust expansion and subsequent multilineage differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) with defined commercial media is presented. This substrate can be applied to common cultureware and used off‐the‐shelf after long‐term storage. Expansion and differentiation of hPSCs are performed entirely on the polymeric surface, enabling the clinical potential of hPSC‐derived cells to be realized.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2013

Ambient DESI and LESA-MS Analysis of Proteins Adsorbed to a Biomaterial Surface Using In-Situ Surface Tryptic Digestion

Wei Rao; Adam D. Celiz; David J. Scurr; Morgan R. Alexander; David A. Barrett

AbstractThe detection and identification of proteins adsorbed onto biomaterial surfaces under ambient conditions has significant experimental advantages but has proven to be difficult to achieve with conventional measuring technologies. In this study, we present an adaptation of desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) and liquid extraction surface analysis (LESA) mass spectrometry (MS) coupled with in-situ surface tryptic digestion to identify protein species from a biomaterial surface. Cytochrome c, myoglobin, and BSA in a combination of single and mixture spots were printed in an array format onto Permanox slides, followed by in-situ surface digestion and detection via MS. Automated tandem MS performed on surface peptides was able to identify the proteins via MASCOT. Limits of detection were determined for DESI-MS and a comparison of DESI and LESA-MS peptide spectra characteristics and sensitivity was made. DESI-MS images of the arrays were produced and analyzed with imaging multivariate analysis to automatically separate peptide peaks for each of the proteins within a mixture into distinct components. This is the first time that DESI and LESA-MS have been used for the in-situ detection of surface digested proteins on biomaterial surfaces and presents a promising proof of concept for the use of ambient MS in the rapid and automated analysis of surface proteins. Graphical abstractᅟ


Advanced Materials | 2016

Combinatorial Biomolecular Nanopatterning for High-Throughput Screening of Stem-Cell Behavior.

Yacoub Y. I. Amin; Kasper Runager; Fabio Simoes; Adam D. Celiz; Vincenzo Taresco; Roberto Rossi; Jan J. Enghild; Lisbeth A. Abildtrup; David Christian Kraft; Duncan S. Sutherland; Morgan R. Alexander; Morten Foss; Ryosuke Ogaki

A novel combinatorial biomolecular nanopatterning method is reported, in which multiple biomolecular ligands can be patterned in multiple nanoscale dimensions on a single surface. The applicability of the combinatorial platform toward cell-biology applications is demonstrated by screening the adhesion behavior of a population of human dental pulp stem cell (hDPSC) on 64 combinations of nanopatterned extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in parallel.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Synthetic light-curable polymeric materials provide a supportive niche for dental pulp stem cells

Kyle H. Vining; Jacob C. Scherba; Alaina M. Bever; Morgan R. Alexander; Adam D. Celiz; David J. Mooney

Dental disease annually affects billions of patients, and while regenerative dentistry aims to heal dental tissue after injury, existing polymeric restorative materials, or fillings, do not directly participate in the healing process in a bioinstructive manner. There is a need for restorative materials that can support native functions of dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs), which are capable of regenerating dentin. A polymer microarray formed from commercially available monomers to rapidly identify materials that support DPSC adhesion is used. Based on these findings, thiol-ene chemistry is employed to achieve rapid light-curing and minimize residual monomer of the lead materials. Several triacrylate bulk polymers support DPSC adhesion, proliferation, and differentiation in vitro, and exhibit stiffness and tensile strength similar to existing dental materials. Conversely, materials composed of a trimethacrylate monomer or bisphenol A glycidyl methacrylate, which is a monomer standard in dental materials, do not support stem cell adhesion and negatively impact matrix and signaling pathways. Furthermore, thiol-ene polymerized triacrylates are used as permanent filling materials at the dentin-pulp interface in direct contact with irreversibly injured pulp tissue. These novel triacrylate-based biomaterials have potential to enable novel regenerative dental therapies in the clinic by both restoring teeth and providing a supportive niche for DPSCs.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2017

Hydrogel substrate stress-relaxation regulates the spreading and proliferation of mouse myoblasts

Aline Bauer; Luo Gu; Brian Kwee; Weiwei Aileen Li; Maxence O. Dellacherie; Adam D. Celiz; David J. Mooney

Mechanical properties of the extracellular microenvironment are known to alter cellular behavior, such as spreading, proliferation or differentiation. Previous studies have primarily focused on studying the effect of matrix stiffness on cells using hydrogel substrates that exhibit purely elastic behavior. However, these studies have neglected a key property exhibited by the extracellular matrix (ECM) and various tissues; viscoelasticity and subsequent stress-relaxation. As muscle exhibits viscoelasticity, stress-relaxation could regulate myoblast behavior such as spreading and proliferation, but this has not been previously studied. In order to test the impact of stress relaxation on myoblasts, we created a set of two-dimensional RGD-modified alginate hydrogel substrates with varying initial elastic moduli and rates of relaxation. The spreading of myoblasts cultured on soft stress-relaxing substrates was found to be greater than cells on purely elastic substrates of the same initial elastic modulus. Additionally, the proliferation of myoblasts was greater on hydrogels that exhibited stress-relaxation, as compared to cells on elastic hydrogels of the same modulus. These findings highlight stress-relaxation as an important mechanical property in the design of a biomaterial system for the culture of myoblasts. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE This article investigates the effect of matrix stress-relaxation on spreading and proliferation of myoblasts by using tunable elastic and stress-relaxing alginate hydrogels substrates with different initial elastic moduli. Many past studies investigating the effect of mechanical properties on cell fate have neglected the viscoelastic behavior of extracellular matrices and various tissues and used hydrogels exhibiting purely elastic behavior. Muscle tissue is viscoelastic and exhibits stress-relaxation. Therefore, stress-relaxation could regulate myoblast behavior if it were to be incorporated into the design of hydrogel substrates. Altogether, we showed that stress-relaxation impacts myoblasts spreading and proliferation. These findings enable a better understanding of myoblast behavior on viscoelastic substrates and could lead to the design of more suitable substrates for myoblast expansion in vitro.


Biomaterials Science | 2014

Chemically diverse polymer microarrays and high throughput surface characterisation: a method for discovery of materials for stem cell culture†Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c4bm00054dClick here for additional data file.

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Asha K. Patel; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; Dave Barrett; Lorraine E. Young; Martyn C. Davies; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

Chemically diverse polymer microarrays as a powerful screening tool for the discovery of new materials for a variety of applications.


Macromolecules | 2008

Controlled Ring-Opening Polymerization Initiated via Self-Complementary Hydrogen-Bonding Units

Adam D. Celiz; Oren A. Scherman


Advanced Materials | 2009

Polymer-Mediated Dispersion of Gold Nanoparticles: Using Supramolecular Moieties on the Periphery

Adam D. Celiz; Tung-Chun Lee; Oren A. Scherman

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Chris Denning

University of Nottingham

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Asha K. Patel

University of Nottingham

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Daniel G. Anderson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Robert Langer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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