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Osteoclast-Driven Polydopamine-to-Dopamine Release: An Upgrade Patch for Polydopamine-Functionalized Tissue Engineering Scaffolds.

Authors :
Wang, Lufei
Hu, Huamin
Ko, Ching-Chang
Source :
Journal of Functional Biomaterials; Aug2024, Vol. 15 Issue 8, p211, 12p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Polydopamine, a mussel-inspired self-adherent polymer of dopamine, has impressive adhesive properties and thus is one of the most versatile approaches to functionalize tissue engineering scaffolds. To date, many types of polydopamine-functionalized scaffolds have been manufactured and extensively applied in bone tissue engineering at the preclinical stage. However, how polydopamine is biodegraded and metabolized during the bone healing process and the side effects of its metabolite remain largely unknown. These issues are often neglected in the modern manufacture of polydopamine-functionalized materials and restrict them from stepping forward to clinical applications. In this study, using our bioinspired polydopamine-laced hydroxyapatite collagen calcium silicate material as a representative of polydopamine-functionalized tissue engineering scaffolds, we discovered that polydopamine can be metabolized to dopamine specifically by osteoclasts, which we termed "osteoclast-driven polydopamine-to-dopamine release". The released dopamine showed an osteoinductive effect in vitro and promoted bone regeneration in calvarial critical-sized defects. The concept of "osteoclast-driven polydopamine-to-dopamine release" has considerable application potential. It could be easily adopted by other existing polydopamine-functionalized scaffolds: just by recruiting osteoclasts. Once adopted, scaffolds will obtain a dopamine-releasing function, which enables their modulation of osteoblast activity and hence elevates the osteoinductive effect. Thus, "osteoclast-driven polydopamine-to-dopamine release" serves as an upgrade patch, which is useful for many existing polydopamine-functionalized materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20794983
Volume :
15
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Functional Biomaterials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179349322
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jfb15080211