Cargando…

Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings

Bioactive coatings are in high demand to control cellular functions for numerous medical devices. The objective of this in vitro study was to characterize for the first time fibroblast (fibrous scar tissue forming cells) adhesion and proliferation on an important polymeric biomaterial (silicone) coa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cohen, Ariel, Liu-Synder, Peishan, Storey, Dan, Webster, Thomas J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3246386/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11671-007-9069-1
_version_ 1782219941403951104
author Cohen, Ariel
Liu-Synder, Peishan
Storey, Dan
Webster, Thomas J
author_facet Cohen, Ariel
Liu-Synder, Peishan
Storey, Dan
Webster, Thomas J
author_sort Cohen, Ariel
collection PubMed
description Bioactive coatings are in high demand to control cellular functions for numerous medical devices. The objective of this in vitro study was to characterize for the first time fibroblast (fibrous scar tissue forming cells) adhesion and proliferation on an important polymeric biomaterial (silicone) coated with titanium using a novel ionic plasma deposition (IPD) process. Fibroblasts are one of the first anchorage-dependent cells to arrive at an implant surface during the wound healing process. Persistent excessive functions of fibroblasts have been linked to detrimental fibrous tissue formation which may cause implant failure. The IPD process creates a surface-engineered nanostructure (with features usually below 100 nm) by first using a vacuum to remove all contaminants, then guiding charged metallic ions or plasma to the surface of a medical device at ambient temperature. Results demonstrated that compared to currently used titanium and uncoated silicone, silicone coated with titanium using IPD significantly decreased fibroblast adhesion and proliferation. Results also showed competitively increased osteoblast (bone-forming cells) over fibroblast adhesion on silicone coated with titanium; in contrast, osteoblast adhesion was not competitively increased over fibroblast adhesion on uncoated silicone or titanium controls. In this manner, this study strongly suggests that IPD should be further studied for biomaterial applications in which fibrous tissue encapsulation is undesirable (such as for orthopedic implants, cardiovascular components, etc.).
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3246386
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher Springer
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32463862011-12-29 Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings Cohen, Ariel Liu-Synder, Peishan Storey, Dan Webster, Thomas J Nanoscale Res Lett Nano Express Bioactive coatings are in high demand to control cellular functions for numerous medical devices. The objective of this in vitro study was to characterize for the first time fibroblast (fibrous scar tissue forming cells) adhesion and proliferation on an important polymeric biomaterial (silicone) coated with titanium using a novel ionic plasma deposition (IPD) process. Fibroblasts are one of the first anchorage-dependent cells to arrive at an implant surface during the wound healing process. Persistent excessive functions of fibroblasts have been linked to detrimental fibrous tissue formation which may cause implant failure. The IPD process creates a surface-engineered nanostructure (with features usually below 100 nm) by first using a vacuum to remove all contaminants, then guiding charged metallic ions or plasma to the surface of a medical device at ambient temperature. Results demonstrated that compared to currently used titanium and uncoated silicone, silicone coated with titanium using IPD significantly decreased fibroblast adhesion and proliferation. Results also showed competitively increased osteoblast (bone-forming cells) over fibroblast adhesion on silicone coated with titanium; in contrast, osteoblast adhesion was not competitively increased over fibroblast adhesion on uncoated silicone or titanium controls. In this manner, this study strongly suggests that IPD should be further studied for biomaterial applications in which fibrous tissue encapsulation is undesirable (such as for orthopedic implants, cardiovascular components, etc.). Springer 2007-07-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3246386/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11671-007-9069-1 Text en Copyright ©2007 to the authors
spellingShingle Nano Express
Cohen, Ariel
Liu-Synder, Peishan
Storey, Dan
Webster, Thomas J
Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings
title Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings
title_full Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings
title_fullStr Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings
title_full_unstemmed Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings
title_short Decreased Fibroblast and Increased Osteoblast Functions on Ionic Plasma Deposited Nanostructured Ti Coatings
title_sort decreased fibroblast and increased osteoblast functions on ionic plasma deposited nanostructured ti coatings
topic Nano Express
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3246386/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11671-007-9069-1
work_keys_str_mv AT cohenariel decreasedfibroblastandincreasedosteoblastfunctionsonionicplasmadepositednanostructuredticoatings
AT liusynderpeishan decreasedfibroblastandincreasedosteoblastfunctionsonionicplasmadepositednanostructuredticoatings
AT storeydan decreasedfibroblastandincreasedosteoblastfunctionsonionicplasmadepositednanostructuredticoatings
AT websterthomasj decreasedfibroblastandincreasedosteoblastfunctionsonionicplasmadepositednanostructuredticoatings