Cellulose-Chitosan-Nanohydroxyapatite Hybrid Composites by One-Pot Synthesis for Biomedical Applications.

Polymers (Basel)

Universidad del Papaloapan, Instituto de Química Aplicada, Circuito Central 200, Parque Industrial, C.P. 68301 Tuxtepec, Mexico.

Published: May 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on developing hybrid materials for bone tissue engineering that promote cell survival and activity, primarily using cellulose and chitosan.
  • The research synthesizes four bio-nanocomposites with varying chitosan content and evaluates their effects on human dermal fibroblast cells through cytotoxicity assays and various characterization techniques.
  • Results indicate that a composite with 10% chitosan demonstrated the best cell survival and minimal detachment, suggesting its potential as an effective and economical biomaterial for future studies in bone tissue engineering.

Article Abstract

The development of organic-inorganic hybrid materials deserves special interest for bone tissue engineering applications, where materials must have properties that induce the survival and activation of cells derived from the mesenchyme. In this work, four bio-nanocomposites based on cellulose and variable content of chitosan, from 15 to 50 % based on cellulose, with nanohydroxyapatite and β-Glycerophosphate as cross-linking agent were synthesized by simplified and low-energy-demanding solvent exchange method to determine the best ratio of chitosan to cellulose matrix. This study analyzes the metabolic activity and survival of human dermal fibroblast cells cultivated in four bio-nanocomposites based on cellulose and the variable content of chitosan. The biocompatibility was tested by the in vitro cytotoxicity assays Live/Dead and PrestoBlue. In addition, the composites were characterized by FTIR, XRD and SEM. The results have shown that the vibration bands of β-Glycerophosphate have prevailed over the other components bands, while new diffraction planes have emerged from the interaction between the cross-linking agent and the biopolymers. The bio-nanocomposite micrographs have shown no surface porosity as purposely designed. On the other hand, cell death and detachment were observed when the composites of 1 and 0.1 /% were used. However, the composite containing 10 % chitosan, against the sum of cellulose and β-Glycerophosphate, has shown less cell death and detachment when used at 0.01 /%, making it suitable for more in vitro studies in bone tissue engineering, as a promising economical biomaterial.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8161035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym13101655DOI Listing

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