4.7 Article

3D Printable Composite Biomaterials Based on GelMA and Hydroxyapatite Powders Doped with Cerium Ions for Bone Tissue Regeneration

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031841

Keywords

3D printing; hydroxyapatite doped; cerium; gelatin methacryloyl; biological analyses

Funding

  1. University POLITEHNICA of Bucharest
  2. [BIOCOMP3DPRINT]
  3. [PN-III-P2-2.1-PED-2019-4216]
  4. [P_36_611]
  5. [107066]

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The main objective of this study was to produce 3D printable hydrogels based on GelMA and hydroxyapatite doped with cerium ions for bone regeneration. The study involved substitution of Ca2+ ions with cerium ions in hydroxyapatite, selection of optimal concentrations for HAp doping and GelMA for 3D printing, and in vitro biological assessment and osteogenic differentiation experiments. The results showed that 30% GelMA-3% HC5 printed scaffolds exhibited suitable characteristics for bone tissue engineering.
The main objective was to produce 3D printable hydrogels based on GelMA and hydroxyapatite doped with cerium ions with potential application in bone regeneration. The first part of the study regards the substitution of Ca2+ ions from hydroxyapatite structure with cerium ions (Ca10-xCex(PO4)(6)(OH)(2), xCe = 0.1, 0.3, 0.5). The second part followed the selection of the optimal concentration of HAp doped, which will ensure GelMA-based scaffolds with good biocompatibility, viability and cell proliferation. The third part aimed to select the optimal concentrations of GelMA for the 3D printing process (20%, 30% and 35%). In vitro biological assessment presented the highest level of cell viability and proliferation potency of GelMA-HC5 composites, along with a low cytotoxic potential, highlighting the beneficial effects of cerium on cell growth, also supported by Live/Dead results. According to the 3D printing experiments, the 30% GelMA enriched with HC5 was able to generate 3D scaffolds with high structural integrity and homogeneity, showing the highest suitability for the 3D printing process. The osteogenic differentiation experiments confirmed the ability of 30% GelMA-3% HC5 scaffold to support and efficiently maintain the osteogenesis process. Based on the results, 30% GelMA-3% HC5 3D printed scaffolds could be considered as biomaterials with suitable characteristics for application in bone tissue engineering.

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