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Advancing bone tissue engineering one layer at a time: a layer-by-layer assembly approach to 3D bone scaffold materials

Advancing bone tissue engineering one layer at a time: a layer-by-layer assembly approach to 3D bone scaffold materials
Advancing bone tissue engineering one layer at a time: a layer-by-layer assembly approach to 3D bone scaffold materials
The layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly technique has shown excellent potential in tissue engineering applications. The technique is mainly based on electrostatic attraction and involves the sequential adsorption of oppositely charged electrolyte complexes onto a substrate, resulting in uniform single layers that can be rapidly deposited to form nanolayer films. LbL has attracted significant attention as a coating technique due to it being a convenient and affordable fabrication method capable of achieving a wide range of biomaterial coatings while keeping the main biofunctionality of the substrate materials. One promising application is the use of nanolayer films fabricated by LbL assembly in the development of 3-dimensional (3D) bone scaffolds for bone repair and regeneration. Due to their versatility, nanoscale films offer an exciting opportunity for tailoring surface and bulk property modification of implants for osseous defect therapies. This review article discusses the state of the art of the LbL assembly technique, and the properties and functions of LbL-assembled films for engineered bone scaffold application, combination of multilayers for multifunctional coatings and recent advancements in the application of LbL assembly in bone tissue engineering. The recent decade has seen tremendous advances in the promising developments of LbL film systems and their impact on cell interaction and tissue repair. A deep understanding of the cell behaviour and biomaterial interaction for the further development of new generations of LbL films for tissue engineering are the most important targets for biomaterial research in the field. While there is still much to learn about the biological and physicochemical interactions at the interface of nano-surface coated scaffolds and biological systems, we provide a conceptual review to further progress in the LbL approach to 3D bone scaffold materials and inform the future of LbL development in bone tissue engineering.
2047-4849
2734-2758
Sahebalzamani, MohammadAli
d5278542-a296-4c88-ba43-32763d748e06
Ziminska, Monika
a53248bb-9825-4aa4-a9ea-2701a7f618f1
McCarthy, Helen O.
698c5102-f33d-4fca-a52f-a427ffa231c0
Levingstone, Tanya J.
ab119237-934f-4755-ae90-9f899e87929e
Dunne, Nicholas J.
8770b890-5a67-4788-97c8-f4acfc50f2c0
Hamilton, Andrew
9088cf01-8d7f-45f0-af56-b4784227447c
Sahebalzamani, MohammadAli
d5278542-a296-4c88-ba43-32763d748e06
Ziminska, Monika
a53248bb-9825-4aa4-a9ea-2701a7f618f1
McCarthy, Helen O.
698c5102-f33d-4fca-a52f-a427ffa231c0
Levingstone, Tanya J.
ab119237-934f-4755-ae90-9f899e87929e
Dunne, Nicholas J.
8770b890-5a67-4788-97c8-f4acfc50f2c0
Hamilton, Andrew
9088cf01-8d7f-45f0-af56-b4784227447c

Sahebalzamani, MohammadAli, Ziminska, Monika, McCarthy, Helen O., Levingstone, Tanya J., Dunne, Nicholas J. and Hamilton, Andrew (2022) Advancing bone tissue engineering one layer at a time: a layer-by-layer assembly approach to 3D bone scaffold materials. Biomaterials Science, 10 (11), 2734-2758. (doi:10.1039/D1BM01756J).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly technique has shown excellent potential in tissue engineering applications. The technique is mainly based on electrostatic attraction and involves the sequential adsorption of oppositely charged electrolyte complexes onto a substrate, resulting in uniform single layers that can be rapidly deposited to form nanolayer films. LbL has attracted significant attention as a coating technique due to it being a convenient and affordable fabrication method capable of achieving a wide range of biomaterial coatings while keeping the main biofunctionality of the substrate materials. One promising application is the use of nanolayer films fabricated by LbL assembly in the development of 3-dimensional (3D) bone scaffolds for bone repair and regeneration. Due to their versatility, nanoscale films offer an exciting opportunity for tailoring surface and bulk property modification of implants for osseous defect therapies. This review article discusses the state of the art of the LbL assembly technique, and the properties and functions of LbL-assembled films for engineered bone scaffold application, combination of multilayers for multifunctional coatings and recent advancements in the application of LbL assembly in bone tissue engineering. The recent decade has seen tremendous advances in the promising developments of LbL film systems and their impact on cell interaction and tissue repair. A deep understanding of the cell behaviour and biomaterial interaction for the further development of new generations of LbL films for tissue engineering are the most important targets for biomaterial research in the field. While there is still much to learn about the biological and physicochemical interactions at the interface of nano-surface coated scaffolds and biological systems, we provide a conceptual review to further progress in the LbL approach to 3D bone scaffold materials and inform the future of LbL development in bone tissue engineering.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 March 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 March 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485163
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485163
ISSN: 2047-4849
PURE UUID: 51ed56c2-3080-4575-95d6-f17e36a1dcd7
ORCID for Andrew Hamilton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4627-849X

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Date deposited: 30 Nov 2023 17:41
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:47

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Contributors

Author: MohammadAli Sahebalzamani
Author: Monika Ziminska
Author: Helen O. McCarthy
Author: Tanya J. Levingstone
Author: Nicholas J. Dunne
Author: Andrew Hamilton ORCID iD

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