Abstract
ABSTRACTTissue engineering is a new approach for regeneration of damaged tissues. The current clinical methods such as autograft and allograft transplantation are not effective for repairing bone damages, mainly due to the limited available sources and the donor-site side effects. In this research, the nanocomposite poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV)/nano hydroxyapatite (nHA) scaffolds with different nHA ratios for bone regeneration were utilized. The diameter and porosity of scaffolds were approximately 200 nm and 74%, respectively. The degradability test of the scaffolds suggests a low degradation rate with total degradation of 30% after 3 months. Cytotoxicity result showed that cultured osteoblast cells (MC3T3) on nanocomposite scaffolds had superiority in terms of higher proliferation and attachment in comparison with PHBV scaffold. The protein expression of alkaline phosphatase illustrated that nanofibrous scaffold containing hydroxyapatite had the highest alkaline phosphatase activities as a result of better proliferation. These results recommend that PHBV/nHA scaffolds are suitable candidates for bone tissue engineering.
Published Version
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