4.8 Article

Sculpting Bio-Inspired Surface Textures: An Adhesive Janus Periosteum

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 37, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202104636

Keywords

anatomical pattern; bio-inspired surface textures; bone regeneration; Janus periosteum; tissue adhesion

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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The Janus periosteum introduced in this study successfully mimics the structure and function of natural periosteum with interior adhesion and exterior anatomical patterns. Through specialized design and material selection, the Janus periosteum demonstrates strong adhesion and cell manipulation capabilities in both dry and wet conditions. In vivo experiments show that the use of Janus periosteum can enhance bone regeneration and shorten the healing phase.
Existing artificial periostea faces difficulty in supporting the entire bone repair cycle due to the absence of adhesion-centric design and effective cell manipulation, leading to poor inhibition of soft tissue infiltration and induction of osteogenesis and angiogenesis. Here, a Janus periosteum with interior surface adhesion and exterior anatomical patterns to mimic the structure and function of natural periosteum is presented. Photo-crosslinkable polymers are employed to replicate the exterior anisotropic surface structured microgrooves for cell fate manipulation and assemble gecko-inspired fibrillar setae arrays for interior surface adhesion. To further bolster its underwater adhesiveness, mussel-inspired poly (dopamine methacrylamide-co-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (PDMH) is coated onto the periosteum surfaces. This periosteum presents adhesiveness with strong shear and normal adhesion in both dry and wet conditions due to the coordinated interactions of micro setae arrays and PDMH coating; it also boasts effective cell modulation for enhanced synchronous osteogenesis and angiogenesis, without the aid of growth factors. Moreover, the Janus periosteum is found to enhance bone regeneration in vivo with increased new bone formation and neovascularization. It is envisioned that this Janus periosteum will be able to streamline bone fracture surgical repair as a rapidly adhesive, low-maintenance yet robust bandage to significantly cut down the healing phase.

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