Bioactive Materials (Mar 2025)

Rapid assessment of the osteogenic capacity of hydroxyapatite/aragonite using a murine tibial periosteal ossification model

  • Emma Steijvers,
  • Yunshong Shi,
  • Hong Lu,
  • Weixin Zhang,
  • Yitian Zhang,
  • Feihu Zhao,
  • Baichuan Wang,
  • Louise Hughes,
  • Jake E. Barralet,
  • Giulia Degli-Alessandrini,
  • Igor Kraev,
  • Richard Johnston,
  • Zengwu Shao,
  • Frank H. Ebetino,
  • James T. Triffitt,
  • R. Graham G. Russell,
  • Davide Deganello,
  • Xu Cao,
  • Zhidao Xia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2024.11.025
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45
pp. 257 – 273

Abstract

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Biomaterials are widely used as orthopaedic implants and bone graft substitutes. We aimed to develop a rapid osteogenic assessment method using a murine tibial periosteal ossification model to evaluate the bone formation/remodelling potential of a biomaterial within 2–4 weeks. A novel hydroxyapatite/aragonite (HAA) biomaterial was implanted into C57BL/6 mice juxtaskeletally between the tibia and tibialis anterior muscle. Rapid intramembranous bone formation was observed at 14 days, with 4- to 8-fold increases in bone thickness and callus volume in comparison with sham-operated animals (p < 0.0001), followed by bone remodelling and a new layer of cortical bone formation by 28 days after implantation. The addition of zoledronate, a clinically-utilised bisphosphonate, to HAA, promoted significantly more new bone formation than HAA alone over 28 days (p < 0.01). The osteogenic potential of HAA was further confirmed by implanting into a 3.5 mm diameter femoral cancellous bone defect in rats and a 5 mm diameter femoral cortical bone defect in minipigs. To understand the biodegradation and the cellular activity at the cell/biomaterial interfaces, non-decalcified specimens were resin embedded and sections subjected to combined scanning electron microscopy (SEM)/electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD)/energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry (EDS) analysis. We conclude that murine tibial periosteal ossification is a novel method for rapid assessment of the interaction of bioactive materials with osteogenic tissues. This study also highlights that combining calcium carbonate with hydroxyapatite enhances biodegradation and osteogenesis.

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