Aluminum silicate nanotube coating of siloxane-poly(lactic acid)-vaterite composite fibermats for bone regeneration

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Abstract

In our earlier work, a flexible fibermat consisting of a biodegradable composite with soluble silicate species, which has been reported to enhance bone formation, was prepared successfully using poly(L-lactic acid) and siloxane-containing calcium carbonate particles by electrospinning. The fibermat showed enhanced bone formation in an in vivo test. In the present work, to improve the hydrophilicity of skeletal fibers in a fibermat, they were coated with nanotubular aluminum silicate crystals, which have a hydrophilic surface that has excellent affinity to body fluids and a high surface area advantageous for pronounced protein adsorption. The nanotubes were coated easily on the fiber surface using an electrophoretic method. In a conventional contact angle test, a drop of water rapidly penetrated into the nanotube-coated fibermat. The culture test using murine osteoblast-like cells (MC3T3-E1) showed that the cell attachment to the nanotube-coated fibermat at an early stage after seeding was enhanced in comparison with that to the noncoated one. This approach may provide a new method of improving the surface of polymer-based biomaterials. © 2012 Shuji Yamazaki et al.

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Yamazaki, S., Maeda, H., Obata, A., Inukai, K., Kato, K., & Kasuga, T. (2012). Aluminum silicate nanotube coating of siloxane-poly(lactic acid)-vaterite composite fibermats for bone regeneration. Journal of Nanomaterials, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/463768

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