4.8 Article

Construction of a magnesium hydroxide/graphene oxide/hydroxyapatite composite coating on Mg-Ca-Zn-Ag alloy to inhibit bacterial infection and promote bone regeneration

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 354-367

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2024.02.030

Keywords

Mg alloy; Composite coating; Corrosion resistance; Antibacterial ability; Osteogenic activity

Funding

  1. Inter-Governmental S&T Cooperation Project Between China and Romania [2018LMNY003]
  2. Sichuan Science and Technology Program [2019JDTD0008, 2021YFS0020]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M692316, 2020TQ0218]

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This study developed a novel nanocomposite coating on the surface of magnesium alloy using a combined strategy. The coating showed high bonding strength, hydrophilicity, and corrosion resistance. It improved antibacterial activity, promoted osteogenic differentiation of cells, and facilitated bone regeneration. This research provides a promising surface modification strategy for developing multifunctional magnesium-based implants.
The improved corrosion resistance, osteogenic activity, and antibacterial ability are the key factors for promoting the large-scale clinical application of magnesium (Mg)-based implants. In the present study, a novel nanocomposite coating composed of inner magnesium hydroxide, middle graphene oxide, and outer hydroxyapatite (Mg(OH)(2) /GO/HA) is constructed on the surface of Mg-0.8Ca-5Zn-1.5Ag by a combined strategy of hydrothermal treatment, electrophoretic deposition, and electrochemical deposition. The results of material characterization and electrochemical corrosion test showed that all the three coatings have high bonding strength, hydrophilicity and corrosion resistance. In vitro studies show that Mg(OH)(2) indeed improves the antibacterial activity of the substrate. The next GO and GO/HA coating procedures both promote the osteogenic differentiation of MC3T3-E1 cells and show no harm to the antibacterial activity of Mg(OH)(2) coating, but the latter exhibits the best promoting effect. In vivo studies demonstrate that the Mg alloy with the composite coating not only ameliorates osteolysis induced by bacterial invasion but also promotes bone regeneration under both normal and infected conditions. The current study provides a promising surface modification strategy for developing multifunctional Mg-based implants with good corrosion resistance, antibacterial ability and osteogenic activity to enlarge their biomedical applications.

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