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The Impact of Bioactive Surfaces in the Early Stages of Osseointegration: An In Vitro Comparative Study Evaluating the HAnano® and SLActive® Super Hydrophilic Surfaces

Authors :
Geórgia da Silva Feltran
Willian Fernando Zambuzzi
Patrícia Fretes Wood
Rodrigo A. da Silva
Fabio Jose Barbosa Bezerra
Marcel Rodrigues Ferreira
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
University of Taubaté
Paulista University
Source :
BioMed Research International, Scopus, Repositório Institucional da UNESP, Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), instacron:UNESP, BioMed Research International, Vol 2020 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Hindawi, 2020.

Abstract

Made available in DSpace on 2021-06-25T10:13:01Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2020-01-01 There is an increased effort on developing novel and active surfaces in order to accelerate their osteointegration, such as nanosized crystalline hydroxyapatite coating (HAnano®). To better understand the biological behavior of osteoblasts grown on HAnano® surface, the set of data was compared with SLActive®, a hydrophilic sandblasted titanium surface. Methodologically, osteoblasts were seeded on both surfaces up to 72 hours, to allow evaluating cell adhesion, viability, and set of genes encoding proteins related with adhesion, proliferation, and differentiation. Our data shows HAnano® displays an interesting substrate to support cell adhesion with typical spread morphologic cells, while SLActive®-adhering cells presented fusiform morphology. Our data shows that the cellular adhesion mechanism was accompanied with upexpression of integrin β1, Fak, and Src, favoring the assembling of focal adhesion platforms and coupling cell cycle progression (upmodulating of Cdk2, Cdk4, and Cdk6 genes) in response to HAnano®. Additionally, both bioactive surfaces promoted osteoblast differentiation stimulus, by activating Runx2, Osterix, and Alp genes. Although both surfaces promoted Rankl gene expression, Opg gene expression was higher in SLActive® and this difference reflected on the Rankl/Opg ratio. Finally, Caspase1 gene was significantly upmodulated in response to HAnano® and it suggests an involvement of the inflammasome complex. Collectively, this study provides enough evidences to support that the nanohydroxyapatite-coated surface provides the necessary microenvironment to drive osteoblast performance on dental implants and these stages of osteogenesis are expected during the early stages of osseointegration. Lab. of Bioassays and Cellular Dynamics Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences Institute of Biosciences UNESP-Saõ Paulo State University School of Dentistry University of Taubaté Program in Environmental and Experimental Pathology Paulista University Lab. of Bioassays and Cellular Dynamics Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences Institute of Biosciences UNESP-Saõ Paulo State University

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23146133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BioMed Research International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad1eec1825be6e7bbc85c8e3c719ab03
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/3026893