Design of Boron Nitride/Gelatin Electrospun Nanofibers for Bone Tissue Engineering
Résumé
Gelatin is a biodegradable biopolymer obtained by collagen denaturation, which shows poor
mechanical properties. Hence, improving its mechanical properties is very essential towards
the fabrication of efficient nontoxic material for biomedical applications. For this aim, various
methods are employed using external fillers such as ceramics or bioglass. In this report, we
introduce boron nitride (BN) reinforced gelatin as a new class of two dimensional
biocompatible nanomaterials. The effect of the nanofiller on the mechanical behavior is
analyzed. BN is efficiently exfoliated using the biopolymer gelatin as shown through Fourier
transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction (XRD). The exfoliated BN
reinforces gelatin electrospun fibers, which results in an increase in the Young’s modulus.
The ESM are stable after the glutaraldehyde cross-linking and the fibrous morphology is
preserved. The cross-linked gelatin/BN ESM is highly bioactive in forming bone like
hydroxyapatite as shown by scanning electron microscopy. Due to their enhanced
mineralization ability, the cross-linked ESM have been tested on human bone cells (HOS
osteosarcoma cell line). The cell attachment, proliferation and biocompatibility results show
that the ESM are nontoxic and biodegradable. The analysis of osteoblast gene expression and
the measurement of alkaline phosphatase activity confirm that these materials are suitable for
bone tissue engineering
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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 2017, 9, 33695-33706.pdf (2.67 Mo)
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