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EDITORIAL
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Biomaterials Translational - The New Vehicle for Translational Medicine

Qian Wang1*
Submitted: 28 December 2020 | Published: 28 December 2020
Copyright © 2020 by the Author(s). This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial–ShareAlike 4.0 License.
References

Below is the content of the Citations in the paper which has been de-formatted, however, the content stays consistent with the original.

1. Tamaddon, M.; Gilja, H.; Wang, L.; Oliveira, J.; Sun,  X.; Tan, R.; Liu, C. Osteochondral scaffolds for early  treatment of cartilage defects in osteoarthritic joints: frombench to clinic. Biomater Transl. 2020, 1, 3-17.

2. Guo, J., & Lin, Y. (2020). One-dimensional micro/nanomotors for biomedicine: Delivery, sensing and surgery. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 18-32.

3. Xu, X., & Song, J. (2020). Segmental long bone regeneration guided by degradable synthetic polymeric scaffolds. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 33-45.

4. Yang, X., Li, Y., Liu, X., He, W., Huang, Q., & Feng, Q. (2020). Nanoparticles and their effects on differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 58-68.

5. Tan, R., Wan, Y., & Yang, X. (2020). Hydroxyethyl starch and its derivatives as nanocarriers for delivery of diagnostic and therapeutic agents towards cancers. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 46-57.

6. Zhao, F., Yang, Z., Liu, L., Chen, D., Shao, L., & Chen, X. (2020). Design and evaluation of a novel sub-scaffold dental implant system based on the osteoinduction of micro-nano bioactive glass. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 82-88.

7. Shi, Y., He, R., Deng, X., Shao, Z., Deganello, D., Yan, C., & Xia, (2020). Three-dimensional biofabrication of an aragonite-enriched self-hardening bone graft substitute and assessment of its osteogenicity in vitro and in vivo. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 69-81.

8. Yuan, J., Maturavongsadit, P., Zhou, Z., Lv, B., Lin, Y., Yang, J., & Luckanagul, J. (2020). Hyaluronic acid-based hydrogels with tobacco mosaic virus containing cell adhesive peptide induce bone repair in normal and osteoporotic rats. *Biomaterials Translational*, 1(1), 89-98.

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Conflict of interest
The authors declare they have no competing interests.
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