Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10159518 | Acta Biomaterialia | 2013 | 35 Pages |
Abstract
The physico-chemical processes and phenomena occurring at the interface of metallic biomedical implants and the body dictate their successful integration in vivo. Changes in the surface potential and the associated redox reactions at metallic implants can significantly influence several aspects of biomaterial/cell interactions such as cell adhesion and survival in vitro. Accordingly, there is a voltage viability range (voltages which do not compromise cellular viability of the cells cultured on the polarized metal) for metallic implants. We report on cellular dynamics (size, polarity, movement) and temporal changes in the number and total area of focal adhesion complexes in transiently transfected MC3T3-E1 pre-osteoblasts cultured on CoCrMo alloy surfaces polarized at the cathodic and anodic edges of its voltage viability range (â400 and +500Â mV (Ag/AgCl), respectively). Nucleus dynamics (size, circularity, movement) and the release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) were also studied on the polarized metal at â1000, â400 and +500Â mV (Ag/AgCl). Our results show that at â400Â mV, where reduction reactions dominate, a gradual loss of adhesion occurs over 24Â h while cells shrink in size during this time. At +500Â mV, where oxidation reactions dominate (i.e. metal ions form, including Cr6+), cells become non-viable after 5Â h without showing any significant changes in adhesion behavior right before cell death. Nucleus size of cells at â1000Â mV decreased sharply within 15Â min after polarization, which rendered the cells completely non-viable. No significant amount of ROS release by cells was detected on the polarized CoCrMo at any of these voltages.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Bioengineering
Authors
Morteza Haeri, Jeremy L. Gilbert,