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Hydroxyl Groups Induce Bioactivity in Silica/Chitosan Aerogels Designed for Bone Tissue Engineering. In Vitro Model for the Assessment of Osteoblasts Behavior

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/24366

DOI: 10.3390/polym12122802

ISSN: 2073-4360

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2021_031.pdf (10.86Mb)
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Author/s
Pérez Moreno, Antonio; Reyes Peces, María VirtudesAuthority UCA; Santos Martínez, Deseada María de losAuthority UCA; Pinaglia Tobaruela, GonzaloAuthority UCA; de la Orden, Emilio; Vilches Pérez, José Ignacio; Salido Peracaula, MercedesAuthority UCA; Piñero de los Ríos, ManuelAuthority UCA; Rosa Fox, Nicolás Daniel de laAuthority UCA
Date
2020-12
Department
Anatomía Patológica, Biología Celular, Histología, Historia de la Ciencia, Medicina Legal y Forense y Toxicología; Física de la Materia Condensada; Química Física
Source
Polymers 2020, 12(12), 2802
Abstract
Silica (SiO2)/chitosan (CS) composite aerogels are bioactive when they are submerged in simulated body fluid (SBF), causing the formation of bone-like hydroxyapatite (HAp) layer. Silica-based hybrid aerogels improve the elastic behavior, and the combined CS modifies the network entanglement as a crosslinking biopolymer. Tetraethoxysilane (TEOS)/CS is used as network precursors by employing a sol-gel method assisted with high power ultrasound (600 W). Upon gelation and aging, gels are dried in supercritical CO2 to obtain monoliths. Thermograms provide information about the condensation of the remaining hydroxyl groups (400-700 degrees C). This step permits the evaluation of the hydroxyl group's content of 2 to 5 OH nm(-2). The formed Si-OH groups act as the inductor of apatite crystal nucleation in SBF. The N-2 physisorption isotherms show a hysteresis loop of type H3, characteristic to good interconnected porosity, which facilitates both the bioactivity and the adhesion of osteoblasts cells. After two weeks of immersion in SBF, a layer of HAp microcrystals develops on the surface with a stoichiometric Ca/P molar ratio of 1.67 with spherulite morphology and uniform sizes of 6 mu m. This fact asserts the bioactive behavior of these hybrid aerogels. Osteoblasts are cultured on the selected samples and immunolabeled for cytoskeletal and focal adhesion expression related to scaffold nanostructure and composition. The initial osteoconductive response observes points to a great potential of tissue engineering for the designed composite aerogels.
Subjects
aerogels; biomaterials; fracture toughness; hydroxyapatite (HAp); bone tissue engineering; osteoinduction
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This work is under a Creative Commons License Atribución 4.0 Internacional

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