Data in Brief (Jun 2019)

Data from in vivo functionalization of diatom mesoporous biosilica with bisphosphonates

  • Gabriella Leone,
  • Danilo Vona,
  • Elvira De Giglio,
  • Maria Addolorata Bonifacio,
  • Stefania Cometa,
  • Saverio Fiore,
  • Fabio Palumbo,
  • Roberta Ragni,
  • Gianluca M. Farinola,
  • Stefania R. Cicco

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24

Abstract

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Diatoms are unicellular photosynthetic microalgae that produce a sophisticated mesoporous biosilica shell called frustule. Easy to achieve and extract, diatom frustules represent a low-cost source of mesoporous biocompatible biosilica. In this paper, the possibility to in vivo functionalize the diatom biosilica with bisphosphonates (BPs) was investigated. In particular, two BPs were tested: the amino-containing sodium alendronate (ALE) and the amino-lacking sodium etidronate (ETI). According to first SEM-EDX analysis, the presence of the amino-moiety in ALE structure allowed a better incorporation of this BP into living diatom biosilica, compared to ETI. Then, diatom growth was deeply investigated in presence of ALE. After extraction of functionalized frustules, ALE-biosilica was further characterized by XPS and microscopy, and ALE release was evaluated by ferrochelation assay. Moreover, the bone regeneration performances of ALE-functionalized frustules were preliminarily investigated on bone osteoblast-like cells, via Comassie staining. Data are related to the research article “In vivo functionalization of diatom biosilica with sodium alendronate as osteoactive material”.