fotolagen
Fotolagen is a term found in some European science texts to refer to light-activated, collagen- or gelatin-based hydrogels used in biomedicine and tissue engineering. These materials are typically produced by chemically modifying collagen or gelatin with photoreactive groups, enabling crosslinking when irradiated with light in the presence of a photoinitiator. The resulting hydrogel forms a three-dimensional network whose mechanical and biochemical properties can be tuned by the polymer concentration, degree of substitution, and light dose.
Chemistry and processing: Common approaches include the methacrylation of gelatin to yield GelMA, which can be
Applications: Fotolagen hydrogels are used for cell encapsulation, tissue engineering scaffolds, wound dressings, organ-on-a-chip models, and
Limitations: Potential cytotoxicity of initiators, light-induced damage to cells, and swelling or mechanical instability in physiologic
See also: GelMA, photocrosslinkable hydrogels, photopolymerization.
References: Not included here; this is a general overview and readers should consult current literature on