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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Feb 2020
Shields D Llopis-Hernandez V Jayawarna V Gonzales-Garcia C Marshall W Dalby M Salmeron-Sanchez M
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Osteoinductive bone substitutes are in their developmental infancy and a paucity of effective grafts options persists despite clinical demand. Bone mineral substitutes such as hydroxyapatite cause minimal biological activity when compared to osteoinductive systems present biological growth factors in order to drive bone regeneration. We have previously demonstrated the in-vitro efficacy of a bioengineered system at presenting growth factors at ultra low-doses. This study aimed to translate this growth factor delivery system towards a clinically applicable implant.

Osteoinductive surfaces were engineered using plasma polymerisation of poly(ethyl acrylate) onto base materials followed by adsorption of fibronectin protein and subsequently growth factor (BMP-2). Biological activity following ethylene oxide (EO) sterilisation was evaluated using ELISAs targeted against BMP-2, cell differentiation studies and atomic force microscopy. Scaffolds were 3D printed using polycaprolactone/hydroxyapatite composites and mechanically tested using a linear compression models to calculate stress/strain. In-vivo analysis was performed using a critical defect model in 23 mice over an 8 week period. Bone formation was assessed using microCT and histological analysis. Finally, a computer modelling process was developed to convert patient CT images into surface models, then formatted into 3D-printable scaffolds to fill critical defects.

Following EO sterilisation, there was no change in scaffold surface and persistent availability of growth factors. Scaffolds showed adequate porosity for cell migration with mechanical stiffness similar to cancellous bone. Finally, the in vivo murine model demonstrated rapid bone formation with evidence of trabecular remodelling in samples presenting growth factors compared to controls.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Oct 2016
Gonzalez-Garcia C Llopis-Hernandez V Shields D Cantini M Alba A Garcia A Dalby M Salmeron-Sanchez M
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Material-based strategies seek to engineer synthetic microenvironments that mimic the characteristics of physiological extracellular matrices for applications in regenerative therapies, including bone repair and regeneration. In our group, we identified a specific chemistry, poly(ethyl acrylate) (PEA), able to induce the organization of fibronectin (FN), upon adsorption of the protein, into fibrillar networks similar to the physiological ones, leading to enhanced cellular response, in terms of cell adhesion and differentiation. In this work, we exploit these FN networks to capture and present growth factors (GF) in combination with the integrin binding domain of FN during bone tissue healing.

Fibrillar conformation of FN adsorbed on PEA favors the simultaneous availability of the GF binding domain (FNIII12–14) next to the integrin binding region (FNIII9–10), compared to poly(methyl acrylate) (PMA), a material with similar chemistry, where FN adopts a globular conformation. The combined exposure of specific adhesive sequences recognized by integrins and GF binding domains was found to improve the osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells. A higher expression of bone proteins was found when BMP2 is bound or sequestered on the material surface versus its administration in the culture media in vitro. The potential of this system as recruiter of GFs was also investigated in a critical-size bone segmental defect in mouse. The synergistic integrin-GF signalling, induced by fibrillar FN, promoted bone formation in vivo with lower BMP2 doses than current technologies. Furthermore, we optimized the system for its potential use in translational research, seeking to address the clinical need of using biocompatible and biodegradable material implants. Polycaprolactone scaffolds were synthesized and coated with a thin layer of plasma- polymerized PEA that recruits and efficiently presents GF during healing of critical size defects.

The material-driven FN fibrillogenesis provides a new strategy to efficiently reduce the GF doses administrated in bone regenerative therapies.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Oct 2016
Llopis-Hernandez V Sharp D Alba-Perez A Dalby MJ Salmeron-Sanchez M
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Polyether ether ketone (PEEK) has been increasingly employed as biomaterials for trauma, orthopeadic, and spinal implants. However, concern has been raised about the inertness of PEEK which limits bone integration. In this study, we have coated PEEK with a functional material seeking to promote osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC).

We have used spray drying to coat poly(ethyl acrylate) (PEA) as a coating on PEEK. This technique is simple, allows a range of controlled coating thicknesses (from hundred nm to a few um), cost effective and easily translatable to scaffolds or implant surfaces for existing or new orthopaedic applications. PEA induces the organisation of fibronectin (FN) into nanonetworks upon simple adsorption from protein solutions. These FN nanonetworks on PEA represent a microenvironment for efficient growth factor binding and presentation in very low but effective doses. In this study we show cell adhesion and stem cell differentiation towards an osteogenic lineages when bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) was adsorbed on these engineered PEEK/PEA/FN microenvironments in very low doses.

Overall, the developed functional coatings on PEEK has the potential to allow the translation of this material into orthopaedic applications.