Abstract

Conducting polymers and biodegradable polylactide (PLA) scaffolds are both promising biomaterials applied in bone tissue engineering. It is necessary to develop a composite scaffold combining their properties of osteogenic differentiation promotion and three-dimension matrix. To conquer the problem of poor processability of conductive polymers, we use a novel in-situ polymerization/thermal induced phase separation (TIPS) method to fabricate conductive nanofibrous PLA scaffolds with well-distributed polyaniline (PANI) nano-structures. The simple preparation technique provides the possibility to scale-up production of these conductive nanofibrous composite scaffolds. The scaffold structure and content of in-situ formed polyaniline nanoparticles was thoroughly characterized with 1H NMR, FT-IR, XPS, TGA, SEM and UV–vis, and the conductivity/electrochemical properties of the composite scaffolds were controlled with varied feed ratios of aniline to PLA. Meanwhile, the good cytocompatibility of these composite scaffolds was evaluated by culturing bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) on them. The effect of conductive nanofibrous scaffolds on osteogenic differentiation was studied with expression levels of alkaline phosphatase (Alp), osteocalcin (Ocn) and runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2) during the culture of BMSCs for three weeks. The calcium mineralization of BMSCs is determined by alizarin red staining. These results indicated that a moderate content of PANI in the conductive nanofibrous scaffolds significantly promoted osteogenic differentiation of BMSCs for engineering bone tissues.

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