Articolo in rivista, 2021, ENG, 10.1039/d1bm00858g

Magnetic and radio-labeled bio-hybrid scaffolds to promote and track in vivo the progress of bone regeneration

Campodoni, Elisabetta; Velez, Marisela; Fragogeorgi, Eirini; Morales, Irene; de la Presa, Patricia; Stanicki, Dimitri; Dozio, Samuele M.; Xanthopoulos, Stavros; Bouziotis, Penelope; Dermisiadou, Eleftheria; Rouchota, Maritina; Loudos, George; Marin, Pilar; Laurent, Sophie; Boutry, Sebastien; Panseri, Silvia; Montesi, Monica; Tampieri, Anna; Sandri, Monica

Inst Sci & Technol Ceram Natl Res Council CNR; Inst Catalisis & Petr Quim CSIC; Natl Ctr Sci Res NCSR Demokritos; NCSR Demokritos; Inst Magnetismo Aplicado UCM ADIF CSIC; UCM; Univ Mons; Vienna Univ Technol; Ctr Microscopy & Mol Imaging

This work describes the preparation, characterization and functionalization with magnetic nanoparticles of a bone tissue-mimetic scaffold composed of collagen and hydroxyapatite obtained through a biomineralization process. Bone remodeling takes place over several weeks and the possibility to follow it in vivo in a quick and reliable way is still an outstanding issue. Therefore, this work aims to produce an implantable material that can be followed in vivo during bone regeneration by using the existing non-invasive imaging techniques (MRI). To this aim, suitably designed biocompatible SPIONs were linked to the hybrid scaffold using two different strategies, one involving naked SPIONs (nMNPs) and the other using coated and activated SPIONs (MNPs) exposing carboxylic acid functions allowing a covalent attachment between MNPs and collagen molecules. Physico-chemical characterization was carried out to investigate the morphology, crystallinity and stability of the functionalized materials followed by MRI analyses and evaluation of a radiotracer uptake ([Tc-99m]Tc-MDP). Cell proliferation assays in vitro were carried out to check the cytotoxicity and demonstrated no side effects due to the SPIONs. The achieved results demonstrated that the naked and coated SPIONs are more homogeneously distributed in the scaffold when incorporated during the synthesis process. This work demonstrated a suitable approach to develop a biomaterial for bone regeneration that allows the monitoring of the healing progress even for long-term follow-up studies.

Biomaterials science (Print) 9 (22), pp. 7575–7590

Keywords

hybrid scaffold, in vivo tracking, bone regeneration

CNR authors

Sandri Monica, Panseri Silvia, Montesi Monica, Tampieri Anna, Campodoni Elisabetta

CNR institutes

ISSMC – Istituto di Scienza, Tecnologia e Sostenibilità per lo Sviluppo dei Materiali Ceramici

ID: 462458

Year: 2021

Type: Articolo in rivista

Creation: 2022-01-14 23:22:26.000

Last update: 2023-10-30 11:38:06.000

External links

OAI-PMH: Dublin Core

OAI-PMH: Mods

OAI-PMH: RDF

DOI: 10.1039/d1bm00858g

External IDs

CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:462458

DOI: 10.1039/d1bm00858g

ISI Web of Science (WOS): 000708596600001