Publication | Closed Access
Silk–Hydroxyapatite Nanoscale Scaffolds with Programmable Growth Factor Delivery for Bone Repair
92
Citations
47
References
2016
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomimetic MaterialsMultifunctional BiomaterialsBiomaterials DesignBone RepairBiofabricationBiomedical EngineeringSilk–hydroxyapatite Nanoscale ScaffoldsOrthopaedic SurgerySf ScaffoldsBioactive MaterialRegenerative MedicineSynthetic Bone SubstituteRegenerative BiomaterialsBone ScaffoldsMatrix BiologySf NanofibersRegenerative EngineeringFunctional Tissue EngineeringTissue RegenerationHard Tissue EngineeringMedicineBiomaterialsBiocompatible MaterialExtracellular Matrix
Osteoinductive biomaterials are attractive for repairing a variety of bone defects, and biomimetic strategies are useful toward developing bone scaffolds with such capacity. Here, a multiple biomimetic design was developed to improve the osteogenesis capacity of composite scaffolds consisting of hydroxyapatite nanoparticles (HA) and silk fibroin (SF). SF nanofibers and water-dispersible HA nanoparticles were blended to prepare the nanoscaled composite scaffolds with a uniform distribution of HA with a high HA content (40%), imitating the extracellular matrix (ECM) of bone. Bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) was loaded in the SF scaffolds and HA to tune BMP-2 release. In vitro studies showed the preservation of BMP-2 bioactivity in the composite scaffolds, and programmable sustained release was achieved through adjusting the ratio of BMP-2 loaded on SF and HA. In vitro and in vivo osteogenesis studies demonstrated that the composite scaffolds showed improved osteogenesis capacity under suitable BMP-2 release conditions, significantly better than that of BMP-2 loaded SF–HA composite scaffolds reported previously. Therefore, these biomimetic SF–HA nanoscaled scaffolds with tunable BMP-2 delivery provide preferable microenvironments for bone regeneration.
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