Silicon Nitride: A Synthetic Mineral for Vertebrate Biology

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Abstract

The remarkable stoichiometric flexibility of hydroxyapatite (HAp) enables the formation of a variety of charged structural sites at the material's surface which facilitates bone remodeling due to binding of biomolecule moieties in zwitterionic fashion. In this paper, we report for the first time that an optimized biomedical grade silicon nitride (Si 3 N 4) demonstrated cell adhesion and improved osteoconductivity comparable to highly defective, non-stoichiometric natural hydroxyapatite. Si 3 N 4 's zwitterionic-like behavior is a function of the dualism between positive and negative charged off-stoichiometric sites (i.e., N-vacancies versus silanols groups, respectively). Lattice defects at the biomaterial's surface greatly promote interaction with positively- and negatively-charged functional groups in biomolecules, and result in the biologically effective characteristics of silicon nitride. These findings are anticipated to be a starting point for further discoveries of therapeutic bone-graft substitute materials.

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Pezzotti, G., McEntire, B. J., Bock, R., Boffelli, M., Zhu, W., Vitale, E., … Bal, B. S. (2016). Silicon Nitride: A Synthetic Mineral for Vertebrate Biology. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep31717

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