Natural gelatin, extracted from the shiny skin of a seagoing fish called  Alaskan pollock, may someday be put to intriguing new biomedical uses.  U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) chemist Bor-Sen Chiou is  developing strong yet pliable sheets, known as films or membranes, that  might be made from a blend of gelatin from the fish skins and a  bioplastic called polylactic acid or PLA that's produced from fermented  corn sugar. 
The fish- and corn-derived films might be suitable for use commercially  in tissue-engineering laboratories that would produce semi-synthetic  tissue for repair of injured bone or cartilage, for example. That might  speed patients' recovery times, given that damaged bone and cartilage  are often slow to form tissue needed for self-repair. 
Chiou is testing the experimental films in his laboratory at the  Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Western Regional Research Center in  Albany, Calif. ARS is the USDA's chief intramural scientific research  agency. 
At the Albany center, Chiou and colleagues use an ultra-high-tech  process known as "electrospinning" to literally spin together the fish  gelatin and the polylactic acid to form slender, submicroscopic fibers.  When amassed, these nanofibers form sheets of a milky white film or  membrane. In tomorrow's tissue-engineering labs, the films could be "seeded" with  cultures of human cells. The nanofibers would provide the  infinitesimally small scaffolding or support matrices upon which the  cells could replicate. Later, the tissue resulting from the replicating  cells could be used as transplants. The fish-and-PLA membranes are not expected to pose problems such as  allergic reactions. Some surgically implanted medical devices already in  use today are made of PLA, or contain components made of PLA. Chiou and his colleagues - chemist Roberto Avena-Bustillos and  technicians Haani Jafri and Tina Williams - may be the first to use a  blend of fish gelatin and corn-derived plastic to make next-generation  nanofibers. They are collaborating in the research with food  technologists Peter J. Bechtel and Cynthia K. Bower of the ARS Subarctic  Agricultural Research Unit in Kodiak, Alaska, in seeking new uses for  fish skins and other leftovers from Alaska's fish-processing plants.
 
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