1 Tissue Engineering, An Overview --;I Matrix Molecules and Their Ligands --;2 Role of Non-Fibrillar Collagens in Matrix Assemblies --;3 Elastic Fiber Organization --;II USE of Cultured Cells and the Potential of Stem Cells for Tissue Restoration --;4 Myoblast Mediated Gene Therapy --;5 Implantation of Cultured Schwann Cells to Foster Repair in Injured Mammalian Spinal Cord --;6 Progenitor Cells in Embryonic and Post-Natal Rat Livers, Their Growth and Differentiation Potential --;III Co-Cultures and Other in Vitro Systems for Promoting Differentiation and Tissue Formation --;7 Extracellular Matrix, Cellular Mechanics, and Tissue Engineering --;8 Modulation of Cardiac Growth by Sympathetic Innervation: Differential Response Between Normotensive and Hypertensive Rats --;9 Liver Support Through Hepatic Tissue Engineering --;IV Physical Forces as Requirements for Gene Expression, Growth, Morphogenesis, and Differentiation --;10 Evidence for the Role of Physical Forces in Growth, Morphogenesis, and Differentiation --;11 Physical Stress as a Factor in Tissue Growth and Remodeling --;12 Mechanical Stress Effects on Vascular Endothelial Cell Growth --;13 Deformation of Chondrocytes Within the Extracellular Matrix of Articular Cartilage --;14 Mechanical Stretch Rapidly Activates Multiple Signaling Pathways in Cardiac Myocytes --;15 Shear Stress-Induced Gene Expression in Human Endothelial Cells --;V Materials for Tissue Remodeling in Vivo and in Vitro --;16 Tissue Engineering of Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle for Correction of Congenital and Genetic Abnormalities and Reconstruction Following Physical Damage --;17 Small Intestinal Submucosa (SIS): A Biomaterial Conducive to Smart Tissue Remodeling --;18 Matrix Engineering: Remodeling of Dense Fibrillar Collagen Vascular Grafts In Vivo --;19 Bioelastic Materials as Matrices for Tissue Reconstruction --;VI Approaches to Allografting Engineered Cells and Tissues --;20 Induction of Immunological Unresponsiveness in the Adult Animal --;21 'Neutral Allografts' Cultured Allogenic Cells as Building Blocks of Engineered Organs Transplanted Across MHC Barriers.