Abstract

Artificial construction of tissue engineering implants with bone-mimicking structure and osteogenic function is of great significance for bone regeneration, but it remains a formidable challenge. Herein, inspired by natural bone, a biomimetically hierarchical hydrogel scaffold with highly ordered arrangement and multi-layered concentric circular structure is constructed by a convenient free-injection method for osteoimmunomodulation and bone defect regeneration. Ultralong hydroxyapatite nanowires act as skeleton unit to assemble into the hierarchically ordered nanowire bundles and further hybridization with hyaluronic acid methacrylate and loading with layered double hydroxide nanosheets to form the stable biomimetic scaffold. The biomimetic scaffold exhibits anisotropic structure, high water content and porosity, mechanical robustness, and sustained release of bioactive ions. In particular, the excellent biocompatibility together with ordered topography and biochemical cue can guide recruitment and directional migration of stem cells, and effectively promote osteogenic differentiation and vascularization in vitro. Moreover, the biomimetic scaffold induces M2 phenotype polarization of macrophages, thus creating a favorable osteoimmune environment. The in vivo study proves that the biomimetic scaffold can attenuate inflammation, promote vascularized ossification, and further accelerate new bone formation. This study provides an innovative strategy to construct multifunctional anisotropic biomaterials for bone tissue engineering.

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