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Cobalt-Releasing 1393 Bioactive Glass-Derived Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications

Authorized Users Only
2014
Authors
Hoppe, Alexander
Jokić, Bojan
Janaćković, Đorđe
Fey, Tobias
Greil, Peter
Romeis, Stefan
Schmidt, Jochen
Peukert, Wolfgang
Lao, Jonathan
Jallot, Edouard
Boccaccini, Aldo R.
Article (Published version)
Metadata
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Abstract
Loading biomaterials with angiogenic therapeutics has emerged as a promising approach for developing superior biomaterials for engineering bone constructs. In this context, cobalt-releasing materials are of interest as Co is a known angiogenic agent. In this study, we report on cobalt-releasing three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds based on a silicate bioactive glass. Novel melt-derived "1393" glass (53 wt % SiO2, 6 wt % Na2O, 12 wt % K2O, wt % MgO, 20 wt % CaO, and 4 wt % P2O5) with CoO substituted for CaO was fabricated and was used to produce a 3D porous scaffold by the foam replica technique. Glass structural and thermal properties as well as scaffold macrostructure, compressive strength, acellular bioactivity, and Co release in simulated body fluid (SBF) were investigated. In particular, detailed insights into the physicochemical reactions occurring at the scaffold-fluid interface were derived from advanced micro-particle-induced X-ray emission/Rutherford backscattering spectrometry an...alysis. CoO is shown to act in a concentration-dependent manner as both a network former and a network modifier. At a concentration of 5 wt % CoO, the glass transition point (T-g) of the glass was reduced because of the replacement of stronger Si-O bonds with Co-O bonds in the glass network. Compressive strengths of gt 2 MPa were measured for Co-containing 1393-derived scaffolds, which are comparable to values of human spongy bone. SBF studies showed that all glass scaffolds form a calcium phosphate (CaP) layer, and for 1393-1Co and 1393-5Co, CaP layers with incorporated traces of Co were observed. The highest Co concentrations of similar to 12 ppm were released in SBF after reaction for 21 days, which are known to be within therapeutic ranges reported for Co2+ ions.

Keywords:
cobalt / hypoxia / bioglass / bioactive / scaffold / bone tissue engineering / angiogenesis
Source:
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 2014, 6, 4, 2865-2877
Publisher:
  • Amer Chemical Soc, Washington

DOI: 10.1021/am405354y

ISSN: 1944-8244

PubMed: 24476347

WoS: 000332144600088

Scopus: 2-s2.0-84896893243
[ Google Scholar ]
80
60
URI
http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2770
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications (TMF)
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultet
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Hoppe, Alexander
AU  - Jokić, Bojan
AU  - Janaćković, Đorđe
AU  - Fey, Tobias
AU  - Greil, Peter
AU  - Romeis, Stefan
AU  - Schmidt, Jochen
AU  - Peukert, Wolfgang
AU  - Lao, Jonathan
AU  - Jallot, Edouard
AU  - Boccaccini, Aldo R.
PY  - 2014
UR  - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2770
AB  - Loading biomaterials with angiogenic therapeutics has emerged as a promising approach for developing superior biomaterials for engineering bone constructs. In this context, cobalt-releasing materials are of interest as Co is a known angiogenic agent. In this study, we report on cobalt-releasing three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds based on a silicate bioactive glass. Novel melt-derived "1393" glass (53 wt % SiO2, 6 wt % Na2O, 12 wt % K2O, wt % MgO, 20 wt % CaO, and 4 wt % P2O5) with CoO substituted for CaO was fabricated and was used to produce a 3D porous scaffold by the foam replica technique. Glass structural and thermal properties as well as scaffold macrostructure, compressive strength, acellular bioactivity, and Co release in simulated body fluid (SBF) were investigated. In particular, detailed insights into the physicochemical reactions occurring at the scaffold-fluid interface were derived from advanced micro-particle-induced X-ray emission/Rutherford backscattering spectrometry analysis. CoO is shown to act in a concentration-dependent manner as both a network former and a network modifier. At a concentration of 5 wt % CoO, the glass transition point (T-g) of the glass was reduced because of the replacement of stronger Si-O bonds with Co-O bonds in the glass network. Compressive strengths of  gt 2 MPa were measured for Co-containing 1393-derived scaffolds, which are comparable to values of human spongy bone. SBF studies showed that all glass scaffolds form a calcium phosphate (CaP) layer, and for 1393-1Co and 1393-5Co, CaP layers with incorporated traces of Co were observed. The highest Co concentrations of similar to 12 ppm were released in SBF after reaction for 21 days, which are known to be within therapeutic ranges reported for Co2+ ions.
PB  - Amer Chemical Soc, Washington
T2  - ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
T1  - Cobalt-Releasing 1393 Bioactive Glass-Derived Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications
EP  - 2877
IS  - 4
SP  - 2865
VL  - 6
DO  - 10.1021/am405354y
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Hoppe, Alexander and Jokić, Bojan and Janaćković, Đorđe and Fey, Tobias and Greil, Peter and Romeis, Stefan and Schmidt, Jochen and Peukert, Wolfgang and Lao, Jonathan and Jallot, Edouard and Boccaccini, Aldo R.",
year = "2014",
abstract = "Loading biomaterials with angiogenic therapeutics has emerged as a promising approach for developing superior biomaterials for engineering bone constructs. In this context, cobalt-releasing materials are of interest as Co is a known angiogenic agent. In this study, we report on cobalt-releasing three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds based on a silicate bioactive glass. Novel melt-derived "1393" glass (53 wt % SiO2, 6 wt % Na2O, 12 wt % K2O, wt % MgO, 20 wt % CaO, and 4 wt % P2O5) with CoO substituted for CaO was fabricated and was used to produce a 3D porous scaffold by the foam replica technique. Glass structural and thermal properties as well as scaffold macrostructure, compressive strength, acellular bioactivity, and Co release in simulated body fluid (SBF) were investigated. In particular, detailed insights into the physicochemical reactions occurring at the scaffold-fluid interface were derived from advanced micro-particle-induced X-ray emission/Rutherford backscattering spectrometry analysis. CoO is shown to act in a concentration-dependent manner as both a network former and a network modifier. At a concentration of 5 wt % CoO, the glass transition point (T-g) of the glass was reduced because of the replacement of stronger Si-O bonds with Co-O bonds in the glass network. Compressive strengths of  gt 2 MPa were measured for Co-containing 1393-derived scaffolds, which are comparable to values of human spongy bone. SBF studies showed that all glass scaffolds form a calcium phosphate (CaP) layer, and for 1393-1Co and 1393-5Co, CaP layers with incorporated traces of Co were observed. The highest Co concentrations of similar to 12 ppm were released in SBF after reaction for 21 days, which are known to be within therapeutic ranges reported for Co2+ ions.",
publisher = "Amer Chemical Soc, Washington",
journal = "ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces",
title = "Cobalt-Releasing 1393 Bioactive Glass-Derived Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications",
pages = "2877-2865",
number = "4",
volume = "6",
doi = "10.1021/am405354y"
}
Hoppe, A., Jokić, B., Janaćković, Đ., Fey, T., Greil, P., Romeis, S., Schmidt, J., Peukert, W., Lao, J., Jallot, E.,& Boccaccini, A. R.. (2014). Cobalt-Releasing 1393 Bioactive Glass-Derived Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications. in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Amer Chemical Soc, Washington., 6(4), 2865-2877.
https://doi.org/10.1021/am405354y
Hoppe A, Jokić B, Janaćković Đ, Fey T, Greil P, Romeis S, Schmidt J, Peukert W, Lao J, Jallot E, Boccaccini AR. Cobalt-Releasing 1393 Bioactive Glass-Derived Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications. in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 2014;6(4):2865-2877.
doi:10.1021/am405354y .
Hoppe, Alexander, Jokić, Bojan, Janaćković, Đorđe, Fey, Tobias, Greil, Peter, Romeis, Stefan, Schmidt, Jochen, Peukert, Wolfgang, Lao, Jonathan, Jallot, Edouard, Boccaccini, Aldo R., "Cobalt-Releasing 1393 Bioactive Glass-Derived Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications" in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 6, no. 4 (2014):2865-2877,
https://doi.org/10.1021/am405354y . .

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