The nice thing about SQL Server is that you can do more or less everything with SQL (T-SQL or some variation thereof) - this is nice because it means that it is relatively easy to do most things without having to worry about (for example) the availability of SMO and further in a reasonably generic fashion.
The second nice thing is that if you run a command in SQL Server Management Studio (a version of which can be downloaded for SQL Server Express) it will, more often than not (and certainly in the case of Backup and Restore), offer to let you save the the script to a file instead of executing it.
So, it would be straightforward for you to use SQL Server Management Studio to determine the structure of SQL based backu and resotre commands and from there to integrate those into your application.
There is, however, a "gotcha" - SQL server will only save backups to/restore backups from a drive that is visible to the machine & service account upon which the SQL Server instance is running, almost certainly not an issue if your application is running on the same machine as the user but potentially a problem if they are not.