Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1428637 Materials Science and Engineering: C 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•SA-treated Ti provides a nanotopographic structure for clinical oral implants.•This could regulate integrin-mediated epithelial cell adhesion and gene expression.•FAK mRNA was significantly higher on SA-treated Ti.•Integrin-α6β4 and laminin-5 mRNA were significantly higher on SA-treated Ti.•Extracellular/intracellular molecular interactions play a key role on SA-treated Ti.

The long-term stability and maintenance of endosseous implants with anodized–hydrothermally treated commercially pure titanium surfaces and a nanotopographic structure (SA-treated c.p.Ti) depend on the barrier function provided by the interface between the transmucosal portion of the implant surface and the peri-implant epithelium. This study investigated the effects of extracellular and intracellular gene expression in adherent gingival epithelial cells cultured for 1–7 days on SA-treated c.p.Ti implant surfaces compared to anodic oxide (AO) c.p.Ti and c.p.Ti disks. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) showed filopodium-like extensions bound closely to the nanotopographic structure of SA-treated c.p.Ti at day 7 of culture. Gene expressions of focal adhesion kinase, integrin-α6β4, and laminin-5 (α3, β3, γ2) were significantly higher on SA-treated c.p.Ti than on c.p.Ti or AO c.p.Ti after 7 days (P < 0.05). Our results confirmed that gingival epithelial cells adhere to SA-treated c.p.Ti as the transmucosal portion of an implant, and that this interaction markedly improves expression of focal adhesion molecules and enhances the epithelial cell phenotype. The cellular gene expression responses driving extracellular and intracellular molecular interactions thus play an important role in maintenance at the interface between SA-treated c.p.Ti implant surfaces and the gingival epithelial cells.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
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