Bioactive Film-Guided Soft-Hard Interface Design Technology for Multi-Tissue Integrative Regeneration.
Yamin LiCan ChenJia JiangShengyang LiuZeren ZhangLan XiaoRuixian LianLili SunWei LuoMichael Tim-Yun OngWayne Yuk-Wai LeeYunsu ChenYuan YuanJinzhong ZhaoChangsheng LiuChangsheng LiuPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2022)
Control over soft-to-hard tissue interfaces is attracting intensive worldwide research efforts. Herein, a bioactive film-guided soft-hard interface design (SHID) for multi-tissue integrative regeneration is shown. Briefly, a soft bioactive film with good elasticity matchable to native ligament tissue, is incorporated with bone-mimic components (calcium phosphate cement, CPC) to partially endow the soft-film with hard-tissue mimicking feature. The hybrid film is elegantly compounded with a clinical artificial ligament to act as a buffer zone to bridge the soft (ligament) and hard tissues (bone). Moreover, the bioactive film-decorated ligament can be rolled into a 3D bio-instructive implant with spatial-controllable distribution of CPC bioactive motifs. CPC then promotes the recruitment and differentiation of endogenous cells in to the implant inside part, which enables a vascularized bone growth into the implant, and forms a structure mimicking the biological ligament-bone interface, thereby significantly improving osteointegration and biomechanical property. Thus, this special design provides an effective SHID-guided implant-bioactivation strategy unreached by the traditional manufacturing methods, enlightening a promising technology to develop an ideal SHID for translational use in the future.
Keyphrases
- soft tissue
- reduced graphene oxide
- room temperature
- bone mineral density
- stem cells
- anterior cruciate ligament
- bone loss
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- machine learning
- bone regeneration
- postmenopausal women
- signaling pathway
- deep learning
- quantum dots
- body composition
- gold nanoparticles
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress