Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1421427 Dental Materials 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Surface modification of biomaterials has been shown to improve the biological response to dental implants. The ability to create a controlled micro-texture on the implant via additive surface modification techniques with bioactive nanohydroxyapatite (nanoHA) may positively influence guided tissue regeneration.ObjectiveThe main goal of this study was to produce micro-fabricated SiO2 surfaces modified with nanohydroxyapatite particles and to characterize their influence on the biological response of Human Dental-Pulp Mesenchymal Stem Cells (hDP-MSCs) and Streptococcus mutans.Materials and methodsA combined methodology of sol–gel and soft-lithography was used to produce micropatterned SiO2 thin films with different percentages of nanoHA micro-aggregates. The surfaces were characterized by SEM/EDS, FT-IR/ATR, AFM, XPS quantitative elemental percentage and contact angle measurements. Biological characterization was performed using hDP-MSCs cultures, while Streptococcus mutans was the selected microorganism to evaluate the bacterial adhesion on the thin films.ResultsMicropatterned SiO2 surfaces with 0%, 1% and 5% of nanoHA micro-aggregates were successfully produced using a combination of sol–gel and soft-lithography. These surfaces controlled the biological response, triggering alignment and oriented proliferation of hDP-MSCs and significant differences in the adhesion of S. mutans to the different surfaces.SignificanceThe micropatterned surfaces exhibited biocompatible behavior that induced an oriented adhesion and proliferation of hDP-MSCs while SiO2 presented low bacterial adhesion. These results show that the combination of sol–gel with soft-lithography is a good approach to create micropatterned surfaces with bioactive nanoparticles for guided tissue regeneration.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
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