Abstract

In the last decades, silk fibroin and wool keratin have been considered functional materials for biomedical applications. In this study, fabrics containing silk fibers from Bombyx mori and Tussah silk fibers from Antheraea pernyi, as well as wool keratin fabrics, were grafted with phosmer CL and phosmer M (commercial names, i.e., methacrylate monomers containing phosphate groups in the molecular side chain) with different weight gains. Both phosmers were recently proposed as flame retarding agents, and their chemical composition suggested a possible application in bone tissue engineering. IR and Raman spectroscopy were used to disclose the possible structural changes induced by grafting and identify the most reactive amino acids towards the phosmers. The same techniques were used to investigate the nucleation of a calcium phosphate phase on the surface of the samples (i.e., bioactivity) after ageing in simulated body fluid (SBF). The phosmers were found to polymerize onto the biopolymers efficiently, and tyrosine and serine underwent phosphorylation (monitored through the strengthening of the Raman band at 1600 cm−1 and the weakening of the Raman band at 1400 cm−1, respectively). In grafted wool keratin, cysteic acid and other oxidation products of disulphide bridges were detected together with sulphated residues. Only slight conformational changes were observed upon grafting, generally towards an enrichment in ordered domains, suggesting that the amorphous regions were more prone to react (and, sometimes, degrade). All samples were shown to be bioactive, with a weight gain of up to 8%. The most bioactive samples contained the highest phosmers amounts, i.e., the highest amounts of phosphate nucleating sites. The sulphate/sulphonate groups present in grafted wool samples appeared to increase bioactivity, as shown by the five-fold increase of the IR phosphate band at 1040 cm−1.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Thanks to their excellent properties, silk fibroin and wool keratin are outstanding proteinaceous materials that have found numerous applications in the biomedical field [1,2,3]; the possibility of using these materials for tissue engineering is a subject of broad interest

  • The involvement of Ser residues in grafting is evidenced by the decrease in intensity of the 1398 cm−1 band, already observed in B. mori silk fibroin fabrics

  • The Raman technique allowed the grafting mechanism to be understood, which involved the phosphorylation of Tyr and Ser residues, whose bands were used to evaluate the affinity between the fabric and the grafting agent

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Summary

Introduction

Thanks to their excellent properties (environmental stability, remarkable mechanical properties, controlled proteolytic biodegradability, morphologic flexibility, biocompatibility), silk fibroin and wool keratin are outstanding proteinaceous materials that have found numerous applications in the biomedical field [1,2,3]; the possibility of using these materials for tissue engineering is a subject of broad interest. Their outstanding features derive from their characteristic structure. Vibrational spectroscopy was used to investigate the possible formation of calcium phosphate phases on the surface of the samples

Results
Vibrational Analyses of Grafted Tussah Silk Fibroin Fabrics
Vibrational Analyses of Grafted Wool Keratin Fabrics
Bioactivity Tests
Grafting
Vibrational Spectroscopy
Conclusions
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