Assist. Prof. Dr. Tao Yuan | Regenerative Medicine | Editorial Board Member
Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University | China
Tao Yuan is an emerging spine-surgery researcher whose academic record reflects strong clinical training and a rapidly advancing scientific profile, supported by a total of 7 research documents listed in this CV. The quality and impact of the publications suggest early yet meaningful contributions across biomaterials, spinal cord repair, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine. His work spans cutting-edge areas such as biomimetic multichannel silk nerve conduits, injectable silk fibroin hydrogels, advanced cartilage scaffolds, and 3D-printed hemostatic materials, demonstrating a rare ability to integrate clinical need with material innovation. As a doctoral researcher trained under prominent supervisors at Central South University and during joint research at the Wenzhou Institute, he has independently completed high-impact projects including the construction of bionic spinal cord, long bone, and tracheal structures. His publications in top-tier journals—Advanced Materials, Advanced Functional Materials, Materials Today Bio, and ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering—highlight his capacity for innovation and leadership in regenerative biomaterials. Overall, his profile shows strong trajectory, interdisciplinary expertise, and significant potential for high-impact contributions to orthopedic and spinal tissue engineering research.
Featured Publications
Zhou, K., Yuan, T., Wang, S., Hu, F., Luo, L., Chen, L., & Yang, L. Beyond natural silk: Bioengineered silk fibroin for bone regeneration.
Zhu, Z., Ma, K., Yuan, T., Li, B., Liu, L., & Bai, Y. Spinal cord injury repair: Mechanisms, applications, and prospects of hydrogel therapies.
Yuan, T., Li, W., Zhou, M., Wang, X., Wang, B., & Zhao, Y. Biomimetic multichannel silk nerve conduits with multicellular spatiotemporal distributions for spinal cord injury repair.
Zhou, M., Yuan, T., & Shang, L. 3D printing of naturally derived adhesive hemostatic sponge.
Shen, K., Duan, A., Cheng, J., Yuan, T., Zhou, J., Song, H., Chen, Z., Wan, B., Liu, J., Zhang, X., et al. Exosomes derived from hypoxia-preconditioned mesenchymal stem cells laden in a silk hydrogel promote cartilage regeneration via the miR-205-5p/PTEN/AKT pathway.