Title :
Micro/nanorough titanium-aluminum-vanadium alloy surfaces trigger alternate osteoblast integrin expression profile
Author :
Gittens, R.A. ; Sandhage, Kenneth H. ; Olivares-Navarrete, R. ; Hyzy, S.L. ; Schwartz, Z. ; Boyan, B.D.
Author_Institution :
Center for Biodiversity & Drug Discovery, INDICASAT-AIP, Panama City, Panama
Abstract :
Recent studies of new surface modifications that superimpose well-defined nanostructures on microrough implants mimicking the hierarchical complexity of native bone, report synergistically enhanced osteoblast maturation and local factor production at the protein level compared to smooth, nanorough and microrough surfaces. Whether these micro/nanorough surfaces enhance the osteogenic response by triggering similar patterns of integrin receptors and their associated signaling pathways as with well-established microrough surfaces is not well understood. Human osteoblasts (hOBs) were cultured until confluent for gene expression studies on tissue culture polystyrene (TCPS) or on titanium alloy (Ti6Al4V) disks with different surface topography: smooth, nanorough, microrough and micro/nanorough surfaces. mRNA expression levels of osteogenesis-related markers such as osteocalcin (BGLAP) and bone sialoprotein (BSP), bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2), BMP4, noggin (NOG) and gremlin 1 (GREM1) were all higher on microrough and micro/nanorough surfaces, with few differences between them, compared to smooth and nanorough groups. Interestingly, expression of integrins α1 and α2, which interact primarily with collagens and laminin and have been commonly associated with osteoblast differentiation on microrough Ti and Ti6Al4V, were expressed at lower levels on micro/nanorough surfaces compared to microrough ones. Conversely, the αv subunit, which binds ligands such as vitronectin, osteopontin, and bone sialoprotein among others, had higher expression on micro/nanorough surfaces concomitantly with regulation of the β3 mRNA levels on nanomodified surfaces. These results suggest that the maturation of osteoblasts on micro/nanorough surfaces may be occurring through different integrin engagement than those established for microrough-only surfaces.
Keywords :
RNA; aluminium alloys; biomedical materials; bone; genetics; molecular biophysics; molecular configurations; nanomedicine; nanostructured materials; proteins; rough surfaces; surface roughness; surface treatment; tissue engineering; titanium alloys; vanadium alloys; αv subunit; β3 mRNA levels; BMP4; TiAlV; alternate osteoblast integrin expression profile; associated signaling pathways; bone morphogenetic protein 2; bone sialoprotein; gene expression; gremlin 1; hierarchical complexity; human osteoblasts; integrin receptors; integrins α1; integrins α2; laminin; ligands; local factor production; mRNA expression levels; micro-nanorough titanium-aluminum-vanadium alloy surfaces; microrough implants; microrough surfaces; nanorough surfaces; native bone; noggin; osteoblast maturation; osteocalcin; osteogenesis-related markers; osteogenic response; osteopontin; protein level; smooth surfaces; surface modifications; surface topography; tissue culture polystyrene; titanium alloy disks; vitronectin; well-defined nanostructures; Bones; Gene expression; Rough surfaces; Surface morphology; Surface roughness; Surface topography; Surface treatment; bone; gene expression; implants; mRNA; nanostructures; osseointegration; surface properties;
Conference_Titel :
Bioengineering Conference (NEBEC), 2014 40th Annual Northeast
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
DOI :
10.1109/NEBEC.2014.6972798