Hydroxyapatite reinforced collagen scaffolds with improved architecture and mechanical properties
2015; Elsevier BV; Volume: 17; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.actbio.2015.01.031
ISSN1878-7568
AutoresRobert J. Kane, Holly E. Weiss‐Bilka, Matthew J. Meagher, Yongxing Liu, Joshua Gargac, Glen L. Niebur, Diane R. Wagner, Ryan K. Roeder,
Tópico(s)Collagen: Extraction and Characterization
ResumoHydroxyapatite (HA) reinforced collagen scaffolds have shown promise for synthetic bone graft substitutes and tissue engineering scaffolds. Freeze-dried HA–collagen scaffolds are readily fabricated and have exhibited osteogenicity in vivo, but are limited by an inherent scaffold architecture that results in a relatively small pore size and weak mechanical properties. In order to overcome these limitations, HA–collagen scaffolds were prepared by compression molding HA reinforcements and paraffin microspheres within a suspension of concentrated collagen fibrils (∼180 mg/mL), cross-linking the collagen matrix, and leaching the paraffin porogen. HA–collagen scaffolds exhibited an architecture with high porosity (85–90%), interconnected pores ∼300–400 μm in size, and struts ∼3–100 μm in thickness containing 0–80 vol% HA whisker or powder reinforcements. HA reinforcement enabled a compressive modulus of up to ∼1 MPa, which was an order of magnitude greater than unreinforced collagen scaffolds. The compressive modulus was also at least one order of magnitude greater than comparable freeze-dried HA–collagen scaffolds and two orders of magnitude greater than absorbable collagen sponges used clinically. Moreover, scaffolds reinforced with up to 60 vol% HA exhibited fully recoverable elastic deformation upon loading to 50% compressive strain for at least 100,000 cycles. Thus, the scaffold mechanical properties were well-suited for surgical handling, fixation, and bearing osteogenic loads during bone regeneration. The scaffold architecture, permeability, and composition were shown to be conducive to the infiltration and differentiation of adipose-derive stromal cells in vitro. Acellular scaffolds were demonstrated to induce angiogenesis and osteogenesis after subcutaneous ectopic implantation by recruiting endogenous cell populations, suggesting that the scaffolds were osteoinductive.
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