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Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites

Tissue engineering approaches combine a bioscaffold with stem cells to provide biological substitutes that can repair bone defects and eventually improve tissue functions. The prospective bioscaffold should have good osteoinductivity. Surface chemical and roughness modifications are regarded as valu...

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Autores principales: Yu, Zhang, Xiao, Caiwen, Huang, Yazhuo, Chen, Mingjiao, Wei, Wei, Yang, Xiaoxuan, Zhou, Huifang, Bi, Xiaoping, Lu, Linna, Ruan, Jing, Fan, Xianqun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9080497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35542061
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra00383a
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author Yu, Zhang
Xiao, Caiwen
Huang, Yazhuo
Chen, Mingjiao
Wei, Wei
Yang, Xiaoxuan
Zhou, Huifang
Bi, Xiaoping
Lu, Linna
Ruan, Jing
Fan, Xianqun
author_facet Yu, Zhang
Xiao, Caiwen
Huang, Yazhuo
Chen, Mingjiao
Wei, Wei
Yang, Xiaoxuan
Zhou, Huifang
Bi, Xiaoping
Lu, Linna
Ruan, Jing
Fan, Xianqun
author_sort Yu, Zhang
collection PubMed
description Tissue engineering approaches combine a bioscaffold with stem cells to provide biological substitutes that can repair bone defects and eventually improve tissue functions. The prospective bioscaffold should have good osteoinductivity. Surface chemical and roughness modifications are regarded as valuable strategies for developing bioscaffolds because of their positive effects on enhancing osteogenic differentiation. However, the synergistic combination of the two strategies is currently poorly studied. In this work, a nanoengineered scaffold with surface chemistry (oxygen-containing groups) and roughness (R(q) = 74.1 nm) modifications was fabricated by doping nanohydroxyapatite (nHA), chemically crosslinked graphene oxide (GO) and carboxymethyl chitosan (CMC). The biocompatibility and osteoinductivity of the nanoengineered CMC/nHA/GO scaffold was evaluated in vitro and in vivo, and the osteogenic differentiation mechanism of the nanoengineered scaffold was preliminarily investigated. Our data demonstrated that the enhanced osteoinductivity of CMC/nHA/GO may profit from the surface chemistry and roughness, which benefit the β1 integrin interactions with the extracellular matrix and activate the FAK–ERK signaling pathway to upregulate the expression of osteogenic special proteins. This study indicates that the nanocomposite scaffold with surface chemistry and roughness modifications could serve as a novel and promising bone substitute for tissue engineering.
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spelling pubmed-90804972022-05-09 Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites Yu, Zhang Xiao, Caiwen Huang, Yazhuo Chen, Mingjiao Wei, Wei Yang, Xiaoxuan Zhou, Huifang Bi, Xiaoping Lu, Linna Ruan, Jing Fan, Xianqun RSC Adv Chemistry Tissue engineering approaches combine a bioscaffold with stem cells to provide biological substitutes that can repair bone defects and eventually improve tissue functions. The prospective bioscaffold should have good osteoinductivity. Surface chemical and roughness modifications are regarded as valuable strategies for developing bioscaffolds because of their positive effects on enhancing osteogenic differentiation. However, the synergistic combination of the two strategies is currently poorly studied. In this work, a nanoengineered scaffold with surface chemistry (oxygen-containing groups) and roughness (R(q) = 74.1 nm) modifications was fabricated by doping nanohydroxyapatite (nHA), chemically crosslinked graphene oxide (GO) and carboxymethyl chitosan (CMC). The biocompatibility and osteoinductivity of the nanoengineered CMC/nHA/GO scaffold was evaluated in vitro and in vivo, and the osteogenic differentiation mechanism of the nanoengineered scaffold was preliminarily investigated. Our data demonstrated that the enhanced osteoinductivity of CMC/nHA/GO may profit from the surface chemistry and roughness, which benefit the β1 integrin interactions with the extracellular matrix and activate the FAK–ERK signaling pathway to upregulate the expression of osteogenic special proteins. This study indicates that the nanocomposite scaffold with surface chemistry and roughness modifications could serve as a novel and promising bone substitute for tissue engineering. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9080497/ /pubmed/35542061 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra00383a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Yu, Zhang
Xiao, Caiwen
Huang, Yazhuo
Chen, Mingjiao
Wei, Wei
Yang, Xiaoxuan
Zhou, Huifang
Bi, Xiaoping
Lu, Linna
Ruan, Jing
Fan, Xianqun
Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
title Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
title_full Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
title_fullStr Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
title_full_unstemmed Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
title_short Enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
title_sort enhanced bioactivity and osteoinductivity of carboxymethyl chitosan/nanohydroxyapatite/graphene oxide nanocomposites
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9080497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35542061
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra00383a
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