Bionanotechnology and Nanobiotechnology: Biomimetics or Engineering Nature?
A special issue of Nanomaterials (ISSN 2079-4991). This special issue belongs to the section "Biology and Medicines".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2021) | Viewed by 23184
Special Issue Editors
Interests: surface modification; plasma nanoscience; nanobiotechnology; bionanotechnology; cryoEM; time-resolved microscopy; nanofabrication; AFM; tissue engineering; cell–surface interactions; foams; coatings; biomimetics
Interests: biomaterials; polymeric scaffolds; tissue engineering; regenerative medicine; biomimetics; micro and nanofabrication; electrospinning; microfluidics; biosensors; organ on a chip
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
In the past few years, the fields of bionanotechnology (i.e., the use of biological species in the field of nanotechnology) and nanobiotechnology (i.e., the use of nanotechnology in aiding, controlling, and promoting desired biological functions) have emerged and separated from synthetic biology and bioengineering and are now starting to be established as independent fields. The huge interest can be exemplified by various recent Nobel Prizes in Chemistry. For bionanotechnology, a Nobel Prize for design and synthesis of molecular machines (2016) was awarded, while for nanobiotechnology, there was an award for the directed evolution of enzymes (2018). Even a characterization tool that could give high resolution information to allow us to understand the underlying mechanisms of proteins and cells was recently awarded with a Nobel Prize in cryogenic electron microscopy (2017). It is self-evident that these fields will become dominant in the next few years.
This Special Issue will bring together the latest advances in the fields of bionanotechnology and nanobiotechnology. The issue aims to highlight the challenges and obstacles underpinning these newly established fields. By understanding and identifying the hurdles and bottlenecks, it will deepen our fundamental understanding regarding physical, chemical, and biological phenomena that set the foundations of the aforementioned complex processes. Examples are cell interaction with surfaces, nanopatterns and nanoparticles, electrical and optical effects (i.e., electrical stimulation, energy storage, absorption, luminescence, and fluorescence), DNA computing, organ and tissue engineering, and biological additive manufacturing, to name a few.
The ultimate goal of this Special Issue is to provide a state-of-the-art handbook as well as a guidance and serve as reference for researchers who are interested in the fields of nanobiotechnology and bionanotechnology. This will clarify and underpin these two fields and additionally steer future research directions as well as aid the further development of these fields. The interconnected applications are endless and extend from energy storage to targeted drug delivery, and artificial organ development to agriculture.
We invite investigators to contribute articles of original research, as well as review articles. An indicative but not exclusive list of topics is as follows:
- Nanobiotechnology and bionanotechnology;
- Nanobioengineering, nanobioprinting;
- Nanofabricated scaffolds;
- Nanobiomaterials and bionanomaterials;
- Biomimetics;
- Nanomedicine and nanotherapeutics;
- Proteins as molecular machines and nanorobots;
- Microbe and cell factories;
- DNA origami;
- Nanotechnology for agriculture, forestry and food;
- Nanoelectromechanical and nanofluidic systems for biology;
- Characterisation tools and techniques for nanobiotechnology and bionanotechnology (e.g., cryoEM, AFM, super resolution microscopy).
Dr. Dimitrios Kontziampasis
Dr. Maria Kitsara
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Nanobiotechnology
- Bionanotechnology
- Biomimetics
- Nanofibrous scaffolds
- Nanoparticles
- Bioprinting
- Tissue engineering
- Bioengineering
- Organ on a chip
- Cryogenic electron microscopy
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