4.3 Review

Conversion of natural marine skeletons as scaffolds for bone tissue engineering

Journal

FRONTIERS OF MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 103-117

Publisher

HIGHER EDUCATION PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11706-013-0204-x

Keywords

seashell; sea urchin spine; coral; cuttlebone; hydrothermal conversion; hydroxyapatite (HAP); beta-tricalcium phosphate (beta-TCP)

Funding

  1. von Liebig Foundation in the Jacobs School of Engineering at University of California, San Diego

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Marine CaCO3 skeletons have tailored architectures created by nature, which give them structural support and other functions. For example, seashells have dense lamellar structures, while coral, cuttlebone and sea urchin spines have interconnected porous structures. In our experiments, seashells, coral and cuttlebone were hydrothermally converted to hydroxyapatite (HAP), and sea urchin spines were converted to Mg-substituted tricalcium phosphate, while maintaining their original structures. Partially converted shell samples have mechanical strength, which is close to that of compact human bone. After implantation of converted shell and spine samples in rat femoral defects for 6 weeks, there was newly formed bone growth up to and around the implants. Some new bone was found to migrate through the pores of converted spine samples and grow inward. These results show good bioactivity and osteoconductivity of the implants, indicating the converted shell and spine samples can be used as bone defect fillers. The interconnected porous HAP scaffolds from converted coral or cuttlebone that have pore size larger than 100 mu m likely support infiltration of bone cells and vessels, and finally encourage new bone ingrowth.

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