Abstract

Bone is an electrically responsive tissue, so electroactive materials that can deliver electrical cues to bone are helpful for enhancing regeneration under electrical stimulation (ES), and conductive materials are crucial in ES transmission to determine osteogenesis. Compared with polyesters, biodegradable polyorganophosphazenes (POPPs) show superiority in the field of bone tissue engineering thanks to their rich phosphorus/nitrogen contents, suggesting that the combination of POPPs-based conductive substrates with ES may achieve synergistic enhancements on osteogenesis. Herein, conductive composite films were fabricated by blending poly[(alanine ethyl ester)-(glycine ethyl ester)]phosphazene (PAGP) with carbon nanotubes (CNTs). After surface modification with polydopamine (PDA), bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (BMSCs) were cultured on the films under ES, using the cells cultured on conductive films composed of poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) and CNTs as controls. The BMSCs on PAGP/CNT films demonstrated significantly faster proliferation rates and stronger osteogenic differentiation potentials than those on PLLA/CNT films, while cell attachments on the two PDA-coated substrates were similar. Under appropriate ES, further increases in the expressions of osteogenic markers as alkaline phosphatase, collagen I and calcium deposition were identified in comparison with the cases without ES. The contributions of the osteocompatible POPPs, the substrate conductivity and the ES treatment to enhanced osteogenesis suggested new strategies for the design of bone repair materials.

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