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Faster Biomineralization and Tailored Mechanical Properties of Marine-Resource-Derived Hydroxyapatite Scaffolds with Tunable Interconnected Porous Architecture

Hadagalli, K and Panda, AK and Mandal, S and Basu, B (2019) Faster Biomineralization and Tailored Mechanical Properties of Marine-Resource-Derived Hydroxyapatite Scaffolds with Tunable Interconnected Porous Architecture. In: ACS Applied Bio Materials, 2 (5). pp. 2171-2184.

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsabm.9b00151

Abstract

Although hydroxyapatite (HA)-based porous scaffolds have been widely researched in the last three decades, the development of naturally derived biomimetic HA with a tunable elastic modulus and strength together with faster biomineralization properties has not yet been achieved. To address this specific issue, we report here a scalable biogenic synthesis approach to obtain submicron HA powders from cuttlefish bone. The marine-resource-derived HA together with different pore formers can be conventionally sintered to produce physiologically relevant scaffolds with porous architecture. Depending on pore formers, the scaffolds with a range of porosity of up to 51 with a larger range of pore sizes up to 50 μm were fabricated. An empirical relationship between the compression strength and the elastic modulus with fractional porosity was established. A combination of moderate compressive strength (12-15 MPa) with an elastic modulus up to 1.6 GPa was obtained from cuttlefish-bone-derived HA with wheat flour as the pore former. Most importantly, the specific HA scaffold supports the faster nucleation and growth of the biomineralized apatite layer with full coverage within 3 days of incubation in simulated body fluid. More importantly, the marine-species-derived HA supported better adhesion and proliferation of murine osteoblast cells than HA sintered using powders from nonbiogenic resources. The spectrum of physical and biomineralization properties makes cuttlefish-bone-derived porous HA a new generation of implantable biomaterial for potential application in cancellous bone regeneration.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: ACS Applied Bio Materials
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to American Chemical Society
Keywords: Biomimetics; Biomineralization; Bone; Elastic moduli; Hydroxyapatite; Marine biology; Molluscs; Natural resources; Oceanography; Phosphate minerals; Pore size; Porosity; Powders; Scaffolds; Shellfish; Sintering, Compression strength; Cuttlefish bones; Empirical relationships; Marine resources; Murine osteoblasts; Nucleation and growth; Porous architectures; Simulated body fluids, Compressive strength
Department/Centre: Division of Interdisciplinary Sciences > Centre for Biosystems Science and Engineering
Division of Mechanical Sciences > Materials Engineering (formerly Metallurgy)
Date Deposited: 27 Dec 2022 05:02
Last Modified: 27 Dec 2022 05:02
URI: https://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/78567

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