Osteoblast culture on polished titanium disks modified with phosphonic acids
- 1 July 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Biomedical Materials Research
- Vol. 62 (1) , 149-155
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.10205
Abstract
Titanium is widely used in dental implants due to its suitable physical properties and its good biocompatibility. However, it is integrated into bone only passively, and the resulting fixation in the bone, which is necessary for the function, is mainly mechanical in nature. With the objective of increasing the chemical interaction between the implant and the bone tissue, several phosphonic acids were synthesized and grafted onto titanium disks. Here we report on the proliferation, differentiation, and protein production of rat osteoblastic cells (CRP10/30) on phosphonic‐acid‐modified titanium surfaces studied in vitro. No statistical differences were found in osteoblast proliferation among the phosphonic‐acid‐modified titanium, unmodified titanium, and tissue culture plastic (used as a positive control), indicating that the phosphonic acids used were not cytotoxic to the osteoblasts used. For all surfaces (modified or not), the alkaline phosphatase activity was at least as good as it was on tissue culture plastic. However, the total amount of protein, and especially the collagen type I synthesis, was sensitive to surface modification. On titanium modified with ethane‐1,1,2‐triphosphonic acid, the total amount of synthesized protein was significantly higher than it was on unmodified titanium surfaces. A significant increase (up to 16%) of collagen type I production was observed on titanium surfaces modified with this acid or with methylenediphosphonic acid compared to unmodified titanium surfaces. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 62: 149–155, 2002Keywords
Funding Information
- Swiss National Science Foundation (20-53695.98)
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