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Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential

We extracted magnesium-rich calcium phosphate bioceramics from tilapia bone using a gradient thermal treatment approach and investigated their chemical and physicochemical properties. X-ray diffraction showed that tilapia fish bone-derived hydroxyapatite (FHA) was generated through the first stage o...

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Autores principales: Cao, Xiaxin, Zhu, Jiaqi, Zhang, Changze, Xian, Jiaru, Li, Mengting, Nath Varma, Swastina, Qin, Ziyu, Deng, Qiaoyuan, Zhang, Xinyue, Yang, Wei, Liu, Chaozong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10381238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37504885
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jfb14070390
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author Cao, Xiaxin
Zhu, Jiaqi
Zhang, Changze
Xian, Jiaru
Li, Mengting
Nath Varma, Swastina
Qin, Ziyu
Deng, Qiaoyuan
Zhang, Xinyue
Yang, Wei
Liu, Chaozong
author_facet Cao, Xiaxin
Zhu, Jiaqi
Zhang, Changze
Xian, Jiaru
Li, Mengting
Nath Varma, Swastina
Qin, Ziyu
Deng, Qiaoyuan
Zhang, Xinyue
Yang, Wei
Liu, Chaozong
author_sort Cao, Xiaxin
collection PubMed
description We extracted magnesium-rich calcium phosphate bioceramics from tilapia bone using a gradient thermal treatment approach and investigated their chemical and physicochemical properties. X-ray diffraction showed that tilapia fish bone-derived hydroxyapatite (FHA) was generated through the first stage of thermal processing at 600–800 °C. Using FHA as a precursor, fish bone biphasic calcium phosphate (FBCP) was produced after the second stage of thermal processing at 900–1200 °C. The beta-tricalcium phosphate content in the FBCP increased with an increasing calcination temperature. The fact that the lattice spacing of the FHA and FBCP was smaller than that of commercial hydroxyapatite (CHA) suggests that Mg-substituted calcium phosphate was produced via the gradient thermal treatment. Both the FHA and FBCP contained considerable quantities of magnesium, with the FHA having a higher concentration. In addition, the FHA and FBCP, particularly the FBCP, degraded faster than the CHA. After one day of degradation, both the FHA and FBCP released Mg(2+), with cumulative amounts of 4.38 mg/L and 0.58 mg/L, respectively. Furthermore, the FHA and FBCP demonstrated superior bone-like apatite formation; they are non-toxic and exhibit better osteoconductive activity than the CHA. In light of our findings, bioceramics originating from tilapia bone appear to be promising in biomedical applications such as fabricating tissue engineering scaffolds.
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spelling pubmed-103812382023-07-29 Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential Cao, Xiaxin Zhu, Jiaqi Zhang, Changze Xian, Jiaru Li, Mengting Nath Varma, Swastina Qin, Ziyu Deng, Qiaoyuan Zhang, Xinyue Yang, Wei Liu, Chaozong J Funct Biomater Article We extracted magnesium-rich calcium phosphate bioceramics from tilapia bone using a gradient thermal treatment approach and investigated their chemical and physicochemical properties. X-ray diffraction showed that tilapia fish bone-derived hydroxyapatite (FHA) was generated through the first stage of thermal processing at 600–800 °C. Using FHA as a precursor, fish bone biphasic calcium phosphate (FBCP) was produced after the second stage of thermal processing at 900–1200 °C. The beta-tricalcium phosphate content in the FBCP increased with an increasing calcination temperature. The fact that the lattice spacing of the FHA and FBCP was smaller than that of commercial hydroxyapatite (CHA) suggests that Mg-substituted calcium phosphate was produced via the gradient thermal treatment. Both the FHA and FBCP contained considerable quantities of magnesium, with the FHA having a higher concentration. In addition, the FHA and FBCP, particularly the FBCP, degraded faster than the CHA. After one day of degradation, both the FHA and FBCP released Mg(2+), with cumulative amounts of 4.38 mg/L and 0.58 mg/L, respectively. Furthermore, the FHA and FBCP demonstrated superior bone-like apatite formation; they are non-toxic and exhibit better osteoconductive activity than the CHA. In light of our findings, bioceramics originating from tilapia bone appear to be promising in biomedical applications such as fabricating tissue engineering scaffolds. MDPI 2023-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10381238/ /pubmed/37504885 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jfb14070390 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Cao, Xiaxin
Zhu, Jiaqi
Zhang, Changze
Xian, Jiaru
Li, Mengting
Nath Varma, Swastina
Qin, Ziyu
Deng, Qiaoyuan
Zhang, Xinyue
Yang, Wei
Liu, Chaozong
Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential
title Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential
title_full Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential
title_fullStr Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential
title_full_unstemmed Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential
title_short Magnesium-Rich Calcium Phosphate Derived from Tilapia Bone Has Superior Osteogenic Potential
title_sort magnesium-rich calcium phosphate derived from tilapia bone has superior osteogenic potential
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10381238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37504885
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jfb14070390
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