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Electrospun nanosilicates-based organic/inorganic nanofibers for potential bone tissue engineering.

Authors :
Wang, Yi
Cui, Wenguo
Chou, Joshua
Wen, Shizhu
Sun, Yulong
Zhang, Hongyu
Source :
Colloids & Surfaces B: Biointerfaces. Dec2018, Vol. 172, p90-97. 8p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Graphical abstract Highlights • Nanosilicates-based nanofibers were successfully prepared via electrospinning for bone tissue engineering. • Nanosilicates-based nanofibers promoted cell adhesion and osteogenic differentiation in vitro. • Nanosilicates-based nanofibers facilitated ectopic bone formation in vivo. Abstract Although growth factors and drugs (BMP-2, dexamethasone, etc.) have been widely used for bone tissue engineering, they have unignored limits such as adverse effects at high concentrations and easy inactivation in vivo. Accordingly, more osteoinductive supplements without side effects should be considered as alternatives in the design of bone tissue engineering scaffolds. Nanosilicate is a bioactive inorganic nanomaterial consisting of hydrous sodium lithium magnesium silicate, which is recently found to be safe and effective for bone induction. In this study, a range of organic/inorganic nanofibrous scaffolds with varied nanosilicate concentrations (0%, 1%, 5%, and 10% w/w to PCL matrix) were successfully fabricated via electrospinning. The tensile properties of the nanofibers were enhanced at low nanosilicate concentrations, and the incorporation of nanosilicates had no influence on cytocompatibility. Besides, in vitro osteogenesis experiments showed that nanosilicates-doped nanofibers were capable of inducing bone formation better than pure PCL nanofiber samples. More importantly, the results of histological and immunohistochemical assessments further revealed that the nanosilicates-enriched nanofibers had a significant potential of ectopic bone formation in vivo , while the pure PCL samples only induced limited osteogenic cues. All these results indicate that the nanosilicates-based organic/inorganic nanofibers may be potentially efficient for bone tissue engineering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09277765
Volume :
172
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Colloids & Surfaces B: Biointerfaces
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133319288
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.08.032