Zhao G, Raines A L, Wieland M, Schwartz Z, Boyan B D
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Biomaterials. 2007 Jun;28(18):2821-9. doi: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2007.02.024.
Surface roughness and surface free energy are two important factors that regulate cell responses to biomaterials. Previous studies established that titanium (Ti) substrates with micron-scale and submicron scale topographies promote osteoblast differentiation and osteogenic local factor production and that there is a synergistic response to micro-rough Ti surfaces that have retained their high surface energy via processing that limits hydrocarbon contamination. This study tested the hypothesis that the synergistic response of osteoblasts to these modified surfaces depends on both surface micro-structure and surface energy.
Ti disks were manufactured to present three different surface structures: smooth pretreatment (PT) surfaces with R(a) of 0.2 microm; acid-etched surfaces (A) with a submicron roughness R(a) of 0.83 microm; and sandblasted/acid-etched surfaces (SLA) with R(a) of 3-4 microm. Modified acid-etched (modA) and modified sandblasted/acid-etched (modSLA) Ti substrates, which have low contamination and present a hydroxylated/hydrated surface layer to retain high surface energy, were compared with regular low surface energy A and SLA surfaces. Human osteoblast-like MG63 cells were cultured on these substrates and their responses, including cell shape, growth, differentiation (alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin), and local factor production (TGF-beta1, PGE(2), osteoprotegerin (OPG)) were analyzed (N=6 per variable). Data were normalized to cell number.
There were no significant differences between smooth PT and A surfaces except for a small increase in OPG. Compared to A surfaces, MG63 cells produced 30% more osteocalcin on modA, and 70% more on SLA. However, growth on modSLA increased osteocalcin by more than 250%, which exceeded the sum of independent effects of surface energy and topography. Similar effects were noted when levels of latent TGF-beta1, PGE(2) and OPG were measured in the conditioned media.
The results demonstrate a synergistic effect between high surface energy and topography of Ti substrates and show that both micron-scale and submicron scale structural features are necessary.
表面粗糙度和表面自由能是调节细胞对生物材料反应的两个重要因素。先前的研究表明,具有微米级和亚微米级形貌的钛(Ti)基底可促进成骨细胞分化和成骨局部因子的产生,并且对于通过限制碳氢化合物污染的加工而保留其高表面能的微粗糙Ti表面存在协同反应。本研究检验了以下假设:成骨细胞对这些改性表面的协同反应取决于表面微观结构和表面能。
制造Ti盘以呈现三种不同的表面结构:粗糙度平均高度(R(a))为0.2微米的光滑预处理(PT)表面;亚微米粗糙度R(a)为0.83微米的酸蚀表面(A);以及R(a)为3 - 4微米的喷砂/酸蚀表面(SLA)。将具有低污染并呈现羟基化/水合表面层以保留高表面能的改性酸蚀(modA)和改性喷砂/酸蚀(modSLA)Ti基底与常规低表面能的A和SLA表面进行比较。将人成骨样MG63细胞培养在这些基底上,并分析其反应,包括细胞形状、生长、分化(碱性磷酸酶、骨钙素)和局部因子产生(转化生长因子-β1(TGF-β1)前列腺素E2(PGE(2))、骨保护素(OPG))(每个变量n = 6)。数据按细胞数量进行归一化。
除OPG略有增加外,光滑PT表面和A表面之间无显著差异。与A表面相比,MG63细胞在modA上产生的骨钙素多30%,在SLA上多70%。然而,在modSLA上生长使骨钙素增加超过250%,这超过了表面能和形貌独立作用的总和。当在条件培养基中测量潜伏TGF-β1、PGE(2)和OPG水平时,也观察到类似的效果。
结果证明了Ti基底的高表面能与形貌之间的协同效应,并表明微米级和亚微米级结构特征都是必需的。