Development of biopolymeric hybrid scaffold-based on aac/go/nhap/tio2 nanocomposite for bone tissue engineering: In-vitro analysis

  • Muhammad Umar Aslam Khan*
  • , Wafa Shamsan Al-Arjan
  • , Mona Saad Binkadem
  • , Hassan Mehboob
  • , Adnan Haider
  • , Mohsin Ali Raza
  • , Saiful Izwan Abd Razak
  • , Anwarul Hasan
  • , Rashid Amin
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

64 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bone tissue engineering is an advanced field for treatment of fractured bones to re-store/regulate biological functions. Biopolymeric/bioceramic-based hybrid nanocomposite scaffolds are potential biomaterials for bone tissue because of biodegradable and biocompatible character-istics. We report synthesis of nanocomposite based on acrylic acid (AAc)/guar gum (GG), nano-hydroxyapatite (HAp NPs), titanium nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs), and optimum graphene oxide (GO) amount via free radical polymerization method. Porous scaffolds were fabricated through freeze-drying technique and coated with silver sulphadiazine. Different techniques were used to investigate functional group, crystal structural properties, morphology/elemental properties, porosity, and mechanical properties of fabricated scaffolds. Results show that increasing amount of TiO2 in combination with optimized GO has improved physicochemical and microstructural properties, mechanical properties (compressive strength (2.96 to 13.31 MPa) and Young’s modulus (39.56 to 300.81 MPa)), and porous properties (pore size (256.11 to 107.42 µm) and porosity (79.97 to 44.32%)). After 150 min, silver sulfadiazine release was found to be ~94.1%. In vitro assay of scaffolds also exhibited promising results against mouse pre-osteoblast (MC3T3-E1) cell lines. Hence, these fabricated scaffolds would be potential biomaterials for bone tissue engineering in biomedical engineering.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1319
JournalNanomaterials
Volume11
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2021
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Keywords

  • Biocompatibility
  • Biodegradation
  • Cytotoxicity
  • Drug delivery
  • Graphene oxide
  • Hybrid scaffolds
  • Nanocomposite
  • Tissue engineering

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Chemical Engineering
  • General Materials Science

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