Biomedical Applications of Electro‐Initiated Polymerisation on Ti6Al4 V Titanium Alloy using Silk Fibroin Coatings for Antibiotic Delivery and Improved Cell Metabolism

Author:

Emonson Nicholas S.1,Dharmasiri Bhagya1,Gordon Edward B.2,Borkar Ameya1,Newman Ben1,Wickramasingha Y. Athulya1,Coia Piers1,Harte Timothy1,Newton Jazmyn1,Allardyce Benjamin J.1,Stojcevski Filip1,Kaplan David L.2,Henderson Luke C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Frontier Materials Deakin University Waurn Ponds, VIC 3216 Australia

2. Biomedical Engineering Department Tufts University Medford, MA 02155 USA

Abstract

AbstractSilk fibroin interactions with metallic surfaces can provide utility for medical materials and devices. Toward this goal, titanium alloy (Ti6Al4 V) was covalently grafted with polyacrylamide via electrochemically reducing 4‐nitrobenzene diazonium salt in the presence of acrylamide. Analysis of the modified surfaces with FT‐IR spectra, SEM and AFM were consistent with surface grafting. Functionalised titanium samples with a silk fibroin membrane, with and without impregnated therapeutics, were used to assess cytocompatibility and drug delivery. Initial cytocompatibility experiments using fibroblasts showed that the functionalised samples, both with and without silk fibroin coatings, supported significant increases between 72–136 % in cell metabolism, compared to the controls after 7 days. A 7‐days release profiling showed consistent bacterial inhibition through gentamicin release with average inhibition zones of 239 mm2. Over a 5‐week period, silk fibroin coated samples, both with and without growth factors, supported better human mesenchymal stem cell metabolism with increases reaching 1031 % and 388 %, respectively, compared to samples without the silk fibroin coating with.

Funder

Deakin University

Australian Research Council

Office of Naval Research Global

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry

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