Piezoelectric Electrospun Fibrous Scaffolds for Bone, Articular Cartilage and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Piezoelectric Properties of Bone and Articular Cartilage
2.1. Articular Cartilage
2.2. Bone
3. Piezoelectric Materials
3.1. Piezoceramics
3.2. Piezoelectric Polymers
4. Applications of Piezoelectric Electrospun Scaffolds in Bone, Articular Cartilage and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering
4.1. Bone
4.2. Articular Cartilage
4.3. Osteochondral Tissue
5. Challenges and Future Perspectives
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Articular Cartilage | Bone | References | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Cortical | Trabecular | |||
Conductivity (S/m) | 1.14 ± 0.11 * | 0.02 *1 | 0.079 *1 | [30,31,32] |
Relative Permittivity | 1.39 × 103 *1 | 1.45 × 102 *1 | 2.49 × 102 *1 | [14] |
Piezoelectric Charge Coefficient, d33 (pC/N) | 0.2–0.7 *2 | 0.7–2.3 *2 | [33,34] |
Piezoceramics | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barium Titanate | HAp | Zinc Oxide | Boron Nitride (BNNTs) | KNN/LKNN | |
Piezoelectric Charge Coefficient, d33 (pC/N) | 191 | 1.5–2.4 | 12.4 | 31.2 (d31) | KNN: 63 LKNN: 98 |
References | [42] | [49] | [49] | [56] | [57] |
Piezoceramics | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Barium Titanate | High piezoelectric coefficient. Biocompatible. | Non-biodegradable. Brittle. Poor thermal stability. Some reports of cytotoxicity. | Bone, Neural, and Skin TE. Theranostics. Drug delivery. | [10,33,42,49] |
HAp | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. | Difficult to polarize. Small piezoelectric coefficient (close to bone tissue). Poor mechanical properties. | Bone TE. Implant coating. Filler. | [33,48,49,69] |
Zinc Oxide | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. Antibacterial activity. | Cytotoxicity reports (mainly in nanometer-size particles). Small piezoelectric coefficient (compared with other piezoceramics). | Bone and Skin TE. Biosensors. Anti-Cancer Agent. Drug delivery. Theranostics. | [10,33,42,48,49,70] |
Boron Nitride (BNNTs) | High piezoelectric coefficient. Biocompatible. High mechanical strength. High surface to volume ratio. Oxidation resistance. | Non-biodegradable. Conflicting reports of cytotoxicity. Negative influence over some cell types. | Bone and Neural TE. Nanotube Internalization (drug delivery). Orthopedic Applications. | [10,42,49,71,72] |
KNN/LKNN | High piezoelectric coefficient. Environmentally friendly. Biocompatible. Antibacterial activity. | Reports of cytotoxicity. Difficult processing. Its biodegradability has not been properly investigated. | Bone, Neural, and Skin TE. Drug delivery. | [10,33,42,57] |
Piezoelectric Polymers | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PVDF/PVDF-TrFE | PLLA | PHB/PHBV | Collagen | Cellulose | Chitosan | |
Piezoelectric Charge Coefficient, d33 (pC/N) | PVDF: 34 PVDF-TrFE: 38 | 9.82 (d14) | PHB: 1.6–2 (d14) PHBV: 1.3 (d14) | 0.2–2 (d14) | 0.1 (d31) | 2.54 |
References | [10] | [42] | [49] | [33] | [76] | [77] |
Piezoelectric Polymers | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
PVDF/PVDF-TrFE | High piezoelectric coefficient. Biocompatible. Non-cytotoxic. Flexible. Easy to process. High chemical and physical resistance. | Non-biodegradable. | Bone, Cartilage, Cardiac, Neural, and Skin TE. Nerve guidance channels. | [10,33,42,45,48,49,73] |
PLLA | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. Non-cytotoxic. Easy to process. Elastomeric behavior. Corrosion resistance. | Low piezoelectric coefficient (compared with PVDF and PVDF-TrFE). Reports of adverse inflammatory reactions. | Medical devices (e.g., screws, fixation rods). Bone, Cartilage, Vascular, Skin, and Neural TE. Drug delivery. Wound dressing. | [1,10,33,42,48,73] |
PHB/PHBV | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. Non-cytotoxic. Highly stable. Easy to process. | Low piezoelectric coefficient. Insoluble in water. Poor mechanical properties. | Bone, Cartilage, and Cardiac TE. Medical devices (e.g., sutures, stents). Drug delivery. Theranostics. Wound dressing. | [10,33,42,49,87] |
Collagen | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. Non-cytotoxic. Hydrophilic. Low antigenicity. | Low piezoelectric coefficient (when compared to synthetic PZPs). Poor mechanical strength. Toxic crosslinking agents are often used. | Bone, Cartilage, and Skin TE. Drug delivery. | [10,33,42] |
Cellulose | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. Non-cytotoxic. High tensile strength. High cell adhesion. | Very low piezoelectric coefficient. Small pore size. | Bone and Neural TE. Drug delivery. | [33,42,49,76] |
Chitosan | Biocompatible. Biodegradable. Non-cytotoxic. Antibacterial activity. High porosity. | Low piezoelectric coefficient. Poor mechanical strength. | Bone, Cartilage, and Skin TE. Drug delivery. Anti-Cancer Agent. | [10,33,49,76] |
Fiber Composition | Brief Description | References |
---|---|---|
Barium Titanate/Calcium Phosphates | Casting Solution: Gelatin (70%, wt%) in distilled water Electrospinning Setup: Grounded roller collector Post-Processing: Crosslinking; Dip coating (calcium phosphates, barium titanate nanoparticles); Annealing Results: Gelatin template structure was completely removed from the fibers after annealing. Different morphological scaffold features were obtained with different post-processing parameters (versatile technique). | [111] |
Boron Nitride/Gelatin | Casting Solution: Gelatin (20%, wt%) in acetic acid mixed with boron nitride nanoparticles (0.1%, 1% and 5%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Rotating drum collector Post-Processing: Incubation in SBF (mineralization assay) Results: Generated fibers were found to be biodegradable and stable in aqueous environments. The fibers were also capable of supporting the proliferation and osteogenic differentiation of human osteosarcoma cells (without osteogenic factors). | [112] |
ZnO-fCNTs/Polyurethane | Casting Solution: Polyurethane (PU, 8%, wt%) in DMF/tetrahydrofuran (THF) (1:1) mixed with ZnO nanoparticles (0.2%, wt%) and carbon nanotubes functionalized with carboxylic groups (fCNTs) (0.1%, 0.2% and 0.4%) Electrospinning Setup: Grounded roller collector Post-Processing: Incubation in SBF (mineralization assay) Results: PU/ZnO scaffolds had improved tensile strength and antibacterial activity. Functionalized fibers were able to improve the proliferation and osteogenic differentiation of pre-osteoblasts. | [118] |
PVDF-TrFE (aligned) | Casting Solution: PVDF-TrFE (75/25) (20%, wt%) in DMF/Acetone (3:2) Electrospinning Setup: Grounded roller collector Post-Processing: Annealing; Poling Results: Poled and annealed fibers had the highest relative β phase content and were able to significantly improve the proliferation of mouse pre-osteoblasts. | [113] |
PVDF | Casting Solution: PVDF (15%, wt%) in DMF/Acetone (2:3) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Post-Processing: Oxygen plasma treatment Results: Surface-treated fibers were more hydrophilic than as-spun fibers, and their surface features had long-term stability. More significant cell spreading and integration was observed for surface-treated PVDF fibers. | [114] |
PVDF/HAp | Casting Solution: PVDF (16%, wt%) in DMF/Acetone (1:1) mixed with HAp nanoparticles (5% and 10%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Rotating drum collector Results: HA-filled PVDF fibers were more hydrophobic and had larger mean diameters and a reduced relative β phase content than simple PVDF fibers. | [115] |
PVDF/HAp (coating) | Casting Solution: PVDF (25%, wt%) in DMF/Acetone (3:1) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Post-Processing: Oxygen plasma treatment; Electrodeposition of HAp (three-electrode cell system) Results: The authors of the study verified the antibacterial effect of the resulting fibers and seeded them with osteoblast-like cells. PVDF/HAp scaffolds improved ALP activity and total protein secretion of the osteoblasts. | [119] |
PVDF | Casting Solution: PVDF (22%, wt%) in dimethyl acetamide (DMAC)/Acetone (1:1) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector. Note: two voltages with different polarities were used to produce PDVF fibers with different surface potentials (PVDF (+), PVDF (−)) Results: PVDF (−) fibers had the highest surface potential (similar to the potential of osteoblast-like cells). More significant cell proliferation was observed for PVDF (−) fibers, which were also found to accelerate collagen mineralization. | [120] |
PVDF- Barium Titanate/PVA (coaxial) | Casting Solution: Core—PVDF (27%, wt%) in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)/Acetone (3:2) mixed with barium titanate nanoparticles (1%, 2% and 5%, wt%); Sheath—PVA (15%, wt%) in DMSO/Ethanol (9:1) Electrospinning Setup: Coaxial setup Post-Processing: Incubation in SBF (mineralization assay) Results: The addition of PVA improved the wettability and biodegradability of the coaxial fibers. Barium titanate, in turn, enhanced the bioactivity and mechanical properties of the scaffolds. The generated scaffolds were able to promote the osteogenic differentiation of MSCs. | [121] |
PHBV/SiHAp | Casting Solution: PHBV (23%, wt%) in chloroform mixed with SiHAp nanoparticles (10%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Rotating drum collector Results: HAp contributed to a slight increase in the piezoelectric coefficient of the resulting fibers. Enhanced MSC proliferation and osteogenic differentiation results were observed for the functionalized scaffolds (higher calcium accumulation). | [116] |
PLLA/Barium Titanate (random and aligned) | Casting Solution: PLLA in trifluoroethanol mixed with barium titanate nanoparticles (1%, 3%, 5%, 7% and 10%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector (random fibers); Rotating drum collector (aligned fibers) Results: The addition of barium titanate improved the surface roughness and wettability of the fibers. MSCs seeded on the random functionalized scaffolds displayed improved osteogenic differentiation. | [117] |
Fiber Composition | Brief Description | References |
---|---|---|
PHBV/Barium Titanate (1) | Casting Solution: PHBV (15% and 20%, wt%) in chloroform/methanol (3:2) mixed with barium titanate nanoparticles (5%, 10% and 20%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Post-Processing: Poling Results: The increase in barium titanate concentration resulted in an increase in the Young’s moduli of the resulting scaffolds and an increase in their piezoelectric coefficients. Enhanced chondrocyte adhesion, proliferation, and expression of chondrogenic markers were observed for the fibers containing barium titanate. Poled fibers exhibited increased cell proliferation and collagen production. | [123] |
PHB/Chitosan (1) | Casting Solution: PHB (9%, wt%) in trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) mixed with chitosan (5%, 10%, 15% and 20%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Results: Due to the addition of chitosan, the scaffolds exhibited improved hydrophilicity and biodegradability, as well as reduced porosity and Young’s modulus. The fibers were seeded with isolated rabbit chondrocytes to evaluate cell adhesion. Improved cell spreading and attachment were observed for the scaffolds with chitosan. | [109] |
PHB/CNT/Chitosan Hyaluronic Acid (HA) (1) | Casting Solution: PHB (9%, wt%), chitosan (20%, wt%) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) (1%, wt%) in TFA mixed with hyaluronic acid (HA) (5%, 10% and 15%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Post-Processing: Incubation in SBF (mineralization assay) Results: While chitosan was added to improve the biodegradability and hydrophilicity of the scaffolds, CNTs were used to enhance their mechanical properties. The addition of HA contributed to an increase in the wettability of the resulting scaffolds and a slight reduction of their Young’s modulus and porosity. Chondrocytes were able to attach and proliferate on the surface of these bioactive fibers corroborating their biocompatibility. | [126] |
PVDF/PCL (1) | Casting Solution: PCL in DMF/THF (1:1) mixed with PVDF in DMAC/Acetone (1:1) (50:50) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Results: The resulting fibers were seeded with adipose tissue-derived MSCs and were regularly exposed to hydrostatic pressure. While the piezoelectricity of PVDF was found to promote GAG production and SOX9 gene expression, as well as contribute to improved cell proliferation and integration, the hydrostatic stimuli promoted the production of aggrecan. Type II collagen expression appeared to be uninfluenced by either the presence of PVDF or the applied mechanical stimuli. | [124] |
PLLA/PCL (1) | Casting Solution: PLLA (12% and 20%, wt%) and PCL (12% and 20%, wt%) in dichloromethane (DCM)/DMF (75:25). Note: Two polymeric concentrations were considered to obtain fibers with different diameters (800 nm and 1.8 μm) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Results: PLLA, PCL, and PLLA/PCL scaffolds were seeded with MSCs. High levels of cell proliferation were registered for all conditions, particularly for the PCL and composite fibers. All scaffolds could promote the chondrogenic differentiation of MSCs in the absence of chondrogenic factors, with a more significant expression of type II collagen for the PLLA-containing fibers. Improved cell adhesion and chondrogenic differentiation were reported for the fibers with larger diameters. | [127] |
ZnO/PCL (2) | Casting Solution: PCL (13%, wt%) in methylene chloride mixed with ZnO nanoparticles (1%, 2.5%, 5% and 10%, wt%) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Results: Zinc ions were slowly released over time with the degradation of PCL (relevant regenerative potential). The piezoelectric scaffolds were seeded with MSCs. For higher ZnO concentrations (more piezoelectric), osteogenic differentiation was promoted, for the fibers with lower ZnO concentrations (less piezoelectric) chondrogenic differentiation of MSCs was more prominent. | [108] |
PVDF-TrFE (2) | Casting Solution: PVDF-TrFE (65/35) (25%, wt%) in MEK Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Post-Processing: Annealing Results: Annealed fibers had a larger relative β phase content but also worse mechanical flexibility compared with as-spun PVDF-TrFE fibers. After being seeded with hMSCs, it was verified that while the annealed fibers (more piezoelectric) promoted the osteogenic differentiation of MSCs, the as-spun fibers (less piezoelectric) promoted MSCs chondrogenic differentiation. | [80] |
PLLA/Collagen (biphasic) (2) | Casting Solution: PLLA (3.5%, wt%) in chloroform/ethanol (3:1) Electrospinning Setup: Static collector Results: Type I collagen was extracted from pig tendons and freeze-dried on top of the generated PLLA piezoelectric fibers. While in an in vitro setting, the scaffolds were able to promote the osteogenic differentiation of seeded MSCs. When implanted in vivo in damaged rabbits’ OCT, the biphasic scaffolds enhanced AC formation and accelerated SB emergence. | [125] |
P(LLA-CL)/Collagen/Hyaluronan (chondral region) β-TCP (osseous region) (biphasic) (2) | Casting Solution: P(LLA-CL) (75/25) and type I collagen (8%, wt%) in hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) Electrospinning Setup: Dynamic liquid electrospinning setup Results: P(LLA-CL) (blend of PLLA and PCL) piezoelectric fibers were used as a template to produce analogs for the AC region of the OCT: a type I collagen and hyaluronan blend was deposited on the surface of the fibers, and the scaffolds were freeze-dried (Yarn-CH). β-Tricalcium phosphate (TCP) piezoelectric microporous structures were developed using a high-temperature melting method for replacing the osseous region of the OCT. Prior to being implanted in vivo, the Yarn-CH and TCP regions were attached using collagen and hyaluronan as cement, after which the OCT scaffolds were frozen and BM-MSCs were expanded on the surface of the biphasic scaffolds. Successful repair of OCT defects in rabbits (with improved quality and speed) was reported. | [128] |
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Barbosa, F.; Ferreira, F.C.; Silva, J.C. Piezoelectric Electrospun Fibrous Scaffolds for Bone, Articular Cartilage and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 2907. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23062907
Barbosa F, Ferreira FC, Silva JC. Piezoelectric Electrospun Fibrous Scaffolds for Bone, Articular Cartilage and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(6):2907. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23062907
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarbosa, Frederico, Frederico Castelo Ferreira, and João Carlos Silva. 2022. "Piezoelectric Electrospun Fibrous Scaffolds for Bone, Articular Cartilage and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23, no. 6: 2907. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23062907
APA StyleBarbosa, F., Ferreira, F. C., & Silva, J. C. (2022). Piezoelectric Electrospun Fibrous Scaffolds for Bone, Articular Cartilage and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(6), 2907. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23062907