4.4 Article

Immunomodulatory Effects Mediated by Nano Amorphous Calcium Phosphate/Chitosan Oligosaccharide Lactate Coatings Decorated with Selenium on Titanium Implants

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNCTIONAL BIOMATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jfb14040227

Keywords

deposition; hybrid coating; immunomodulation; implants; inflammatory mediators; nano calcium phosphate

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The aim of this research is to develop a nano amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP)/chitosan oligosaccharide lactate (ChOL) coating decorated with selenium (Se) on a titanium substrate through in situ anodization/anaphoretic deposition and to investigate its immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effects in vivo. The research also aims to examine controlled inflammation and immunomodulation at the implant-tissue interface. The results demonstrate that the ACP/ChOL/Se coating exhibits immunomodulatory properties, characterized by the regulation of proinflammatory cytokines' gene expression, macrophage polarization, fibrous capsule formation, and vascularization in the tissue surrounding the implant.
The aim of this work is in situ anodization/anaphoretic deposition of a nano amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP)/chitosan oligosaccharide lactate (ChOL) multifunctional hybrid coating decorated with selenium (Se) on a titanium substrate and in vivo investigation of its immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effect. Investigating phenomena at the implant-tissue interface of interest for controlled inflammation and immunomodulation was also the aim of the research. In our earlier research, we designed coatings based on ACP and ChOL on titanium with anticorrosive, antibacterial and biocompatible properties, while in the presented results we show that selenium addition makes this coating an immunomodulator. The immunomodulatory effect of the novel hybrid coating is characterized by the examination of the functional aspects in the tissue around the implant (in vivo): proinflammatory cytokines' gene expression, M1 (iNOS) and M2 (Arg1) macrophages, fibrous capsule formation (TGF-beta) and vascularization (VEGF). The EDS, FTIR and XRD analyses prove the formation of a ACP/ChOL/Se multifunctional hybrid coating on Ti and the presence of Se. A higher M2/M1 macrophage ratio in the ACP/ChOL/Se-coated implants compared to pure titanium implants (a higher level of Arg1 expression) is noted at all time points examined (after 7, 14 and 28 days). Lower inflammation measured by gene expression of proinflammatory cytokines IL-1 beta and TNF, lower expression of TGF-beta in the surrounding tissue and higher IL-6 expression (solely at day 7 post-implantation) is noted in presence of the ACP/ChOL/Se-coated implants.

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