Abstract

An elevated bone microenvironmental reactive oxygen species (ROS) level is a hallmark of osteoporosis that often leads to the dysfunction of bone-related mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), which would induce MSC senescence and severely undermine their osteoblastic potential. Herein, we report the in situ construction of bone microenvironment-responsive biofunctional metal-organic framework (bio-MOF) coating on the titanium surface through the coordination between p-xylylenebisphosphonate (PXBP) and Ce/Sr ions by a hydrothermal method. Taking advantage of the anchored Ce and Sr ions, the AHT-Ce/SrMOF implants demonstrate on-demand superoxide dismutase and catalase-like catalytic activities to decompose ROS in MSCs and restore their mitochondrial functions. In vitro analysis showed that the AHT-Ce/SrMOF implants substantially activated the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) signaling pathway in MSCs and reduced the ROS levels. Meanwhile, MSCs grown on AHT-Ce/SrMOF implants displayed significantly higher expressions of the mitochondrial fission marker (DRP1), mitochondrial fusion marker (MFN2 and OPA1), and mitophagy marker (PINK1 and LC3) than those of the AHT-CeMOF and AHT-SrMOF groups, which indicated that the bio-MOF could amend mitochondrial function in MSCs to reverse senescence. In vivo evaluations showed that the bio-MOF-coated Ti implants could restore MSC function in the implant site and promote new bone formation, leading to improved osteointegration in osteoporotic rat. This study may improve implant-mediated fracture healing in the clinics.

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