4.6 Article

Bioactive Hydrogels: Design and Characterization of Cellulose-Derived Injectable Composites

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14164511

Keywords

TEMPO-oxidized nanocellulose; hydrogel; biocomposite; mineralization; hydroxylapatite

Funding

  1. Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Universita e della Ricerca (MIUR) [PRIN 'ACTION' 2017SZ5WZB_002]

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Cellulose is a low-cost, abundant, and renewable polysaccharide with a hierarchical structure composed of nanofibers. The oxidation of cellulose through TEMPO can result in nanofibers with improved properties for bone tissue regeneration. The addition of inorganic particles like CaP can enhance the mechanical properties and bioactivity of the resulting hydrogels.
Cellulose represents a low cost, abundant, and renewable polysaccharide with great versatility; it has a hierarchical structure composed of nanofibers with high aspect ratio (3-4 nm wide, hundreds of mu m long). TEMPO-mediated oxidation represents one of the most diffused methods to obtain cellulose nanofibers (CNFs): It is possible to obtain physically crosslinked hydrogels by means of divalent cation addition. The presence of inorganic components, such as calcium phosphates (CaP), can improve not only their mechanical properties but also the bioactivity of the gels. The aim of this work is to design and characterize a TEMPO-oxidized cellulose nanofibers (TOCNFs) injectable hydrogel embedded with inorganic particles, CaP and CaP-GO, for bone tissue regeneration. Inorganic particles act as physical crosslinkers, as proven by rheological characterization, which reported an increase in mechanical properties. The average load value registered in injection tests was in the range of 1.5-4.4 N, far below 30 N, considered a reasonable injection force upper limit. Samples were stable for up to 28 days and both CaP and CaP-GO accelerate mineralization as suggested by SEM and XRD analysis. No cytotoxic effects were shown on SAOS-2 cells cultured with eluates. This work demonstrated that the physicochemical properties of TOCNFs-based dispersions could be enhanced and modulated through the addition of the inorganic phases, maintaining the injectability and bioactivity of the hydrogels.

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