Back to Search Start Over

In vivo assessment of marine vs bovine origin collagen-based composite scaffolds promoting bone regeneration in a New Zealand rabbit model

Authors :
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal)
European Commission
Diogo, Gabriela S. [0000-0002-5696-631X]
Permuy, María [0000-0002-3708-4821]
González Sotelo, Carmen [0000-0002-0726-4370]
Pérez Martín, Ricardo Isaac [0000-0002-4918-9399]
Muñoz, Fernando [0000-0002-4130-1526]
Diogo, Gabriela S.
Permuy, María
Marques, Catarina F.
González Sotelo, Carmen
Pérez Martín, Ricardo Isaac
Serra, Julia
González, Pio
Muñoz, Fernando
Pirraco, Rogério P.
Reis, Rui L.
Silva, Tiago H.
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal)
European Commission
Diogo, Gabriela S. [0000-0002-5696-631X]
Permuy, María [0000-0002-3708-4821]
González Sotelo, Carmen [0000-0002-0726-4370]
Pérez Martín, Ricardo Isaac [0000-0002-4918-9399]
Muñoz, Fernando [0000-0002-4130-1526]
Diogo, Gabriela S.
Permuy, María
Marques, Catarina F.
González Sotelo, Carmen
Pérez Martín, Ricardo Isaac
Serra, Julia
González, Pio
Muñoz, Fernando
Pirraco, Rogério P.
Reis, Rui L.
Silva, Tiago H.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The ability of human tissues to self-repair is limited, which motivates the scientific community to explore new and better therapeutic approaches to tissue regeneration. The present manuscript provides a comparative study between a marine-based composite biomaterial, and another composed of well-established counterparts for bone tissue regeneration. Blue shark skin collagen was combined with bioapatite obtained from blue shark's teeth (mColl:BAp), while bovine collagen was combined with synthetic hydroxyapatite (bColl:Ap) to produce 3D composite scaffolds by freeze-drying. Collagens showed similar profiles, while apatite particles differed in their composition, being the marine bioapatite a fluoride-enriched ceramic. The marine-sourced biomaterials presented higher porosities, improved mechanical properties, and slower degradation rates when compared to synthetic apatite-reinforced bovine collagen. The in vivo performance regarding bone tissue regeneration was evaluated in defects created in femoral condyles in New Zealand rabbits twelve weeks post-surgery. Micro-CT results showed that mColl:BAp implanted condyles had a slower degradation and an higher tissue formation (17.9 ± 6.9 %) when compared with bColl:Ap implanted ones (12.9 ± 7.6 %). The histomorphometry analysis provided supporting evidence, confirming the observed trend by quantifying 13.1 ± 7.9 % of new tissue formation for mColl:BAp composites and 10.4 ± 3.2 % for bColl:Ap composites, suggesting the potential use of marine biomaterials for bone regeneration

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1431965065
Document Type :
Electronic Resource