Abstract

Mesoporous bioactive glasses (MBGs) are deemed as bone implants for inducing osteoblast differentiation and preventing bone resorption, however, the damage of peri-implantitis on soft and bone tissue has been generally overlooked. To overcome the significant antibacterial deficiency of MBGs, the tungsten disulfide (WS2) nanosheets as near-infrared (NIR) photothermal agents have been integrated with MBG nanospheres to develop novel multifunctional WS2/MBG nanocomposites in this work. The results show that all the WS2/MBG nanocomposites exhibit mesoporous structures with larger specific surface area (up to 475.35 m2/g)) and more negative surface zeta potential (−17.4 mV) than MBG. Notably, the WS2/MBG nanocomposites can effectively promote the apatite forming ability, the proliferation and viability of MC3T3-E1 cells, as well as up-regulate the osteogenic related genes expression of Alp, Runx2, Col1a1, Opn and Bglap. Moreover, it is highlighted that the WS2/MBG nanocomposites exhibit excellent antibacterial efficacy toward S. aureus under NIR laser irradiation, with the antibacterial rate up to 96.13%. These results will offer an appealing strategy to develop multifunctional WS2/MBG nanocomposites with enhanced biological activity and additional antibacterial property for bone tissue engineering.

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