Effect of wheat gluten on improved thermal cross-linking and osteogenesis of hydroxyapatite-gelatin composite scaffolds.

2021 
Abstract Promising strategies to stabilize gelatin or collagen include glutaraldehyde-based chemical cross-linking or dehydrothermal treatment at different temperatures (120–180 °C). However, these procedures require 24–48 h for complete cross-linking to occur. The present study aims to evaluate the role of wheat gluten in enhancing thermal cross-linking of silica-nanohydroxyapatite (nanoHA)-gelatin composite scaffolds, within a shorter period (2 h). Changes in properties were evaluated by varying the ratio of gelatin and gluten in silica-nanoHA matrix (60 wt% ceramic: 40 wt% polymer). The results showed that the scaffolds cross-linked at 170 °C were stable in phosphate-buffered saline for 21 days. It was crystalline and porous in nature. However, the scaffolds with high wheat gluten were brittle, while those with low gluten degraded fast in vitro. The mesenchymal stem cells could adhere, proliferate and differentiate into osteogenic lineage on wheat gluten-containing scaffolds for 21 days (mainly medium concentration). The scaffold also supported new bone formation in critical-sized rat calvarial defect, showing its osteoconductive and osteointegrative nature. In short, this study showed the potential of wheat gluten on improving thermal cross-linking within a shorter period and its suitability to use as a biomimetic bone graft for bone tissue engineering.
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