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Accelerated bonelike apatite growth on porous polymer/ceramic composite scaffolds in vitro

Cited 113 time in Web of Science Cited 127 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Sang-Soo; Park, Min Sun; Gwak, So-Jung; Choi, Cha Yong; Kim, Byung-Soo

Issue Date
2006-10
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert Inc.
Citation
Tissue Engineering, Vol.12 No.10, pp.2997-3006
Abstract
Although biodegradable polymer/ceramic composite scaffolds can overcome the limitations of conventional ceramic bone substitutes, the osteogenic potential of these scaffolds needs to be further enhanced for efficient bone tissue engineering. In this study, bonelike apatite was efficiently coated onto the scaffold surface by using polymer/ceramic composite scaffolds instead of polymer scaffolds and by using an accelerated biomimetic process to enhance the osteogenic potential of the scaffold. The creation of bonelike, apatite-coated polymer scaffold was achieved by incubating the scaffolds in simulated body fluid (SBF). The apatite growth on porous poly(D,L-lactic-co-glycolic acid)/nanohydroxyapatite (PLGA/HA) composite scaffolds was significantly faster than on porous PLGA scaffolds. In addition, the distribution of coated apatite was more uniform on PLGA/HA scaffolds than on PLGA scaffolds. After a 5-day incubation period, the mass of apatite coated onto PLGA/HA scaffolds incubated in 5 x SBF was 2.3-fold higher than PLGA/HA scaffolds incubated in 1 x SBF. Furthermore, when the scaffolds were incubated in 5 x SBF for 5 days, the mass of apatite coated onto PLGA/HA scaffolds was 4.5-fold higher than PLGA scaffolds. These results indicate that the biomimetic apatite coating can be accelerated by using a polymer/ceramic composite scaffold and concentrated SBF. When seeded with osteoblasts, the apatite-coated PLGA/HA scaffolds exhibited significantly higher cell growth, alkaline phosphatase activity, and mineralization in vitro compared to the apatite-coated PLGA scaffolds. Therefore, the apatite-coated PLGA/HA scaffolds may provide enhanced osteogenic potential when used as scaffold for bone tissue engineering.
ISSN
1076-3279
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/204402
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1089/ten.2006.12.2997
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  • College of Engineering
  • School of Chemical and Biological Engineering
Research Area biomaterials, nanomedicine, regenerative medicine

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