Superhydrophilic and topography-regulatable surface grafting on PEEK to improve cellular affinity

  • Bowen Zhang
  • , Junqing Leng
  • , Zhicong Ouyang
  • , Zijian Yang
  • , Qing Zhang
  • , Qingchu Li
  • , Dichen Li
  • , Huiyu Zhao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Polyetheretherketone (PEEK) has been widely used in the preparation of orthopedic implants due to its biological inertness and similar mechanical modulus to natural bone. However, the affinity between biological tissue (bone and soft tissue) and PEEK surface is weak, leading to low osseointegration and an increased risk of inflammation. The situation could be improved by modifying PEEK surface. Surfaces with good hydrophilicity and proper microtopography would promote cellular adhesion and proliferation. This work presented a two-step surface modification method to achieve the effect. Polyacrylic acid (PAA) chains were grafted on PEEK surface by UV irradiation. Then, ethylenediamine (EDA) was added to introduce amino groups and promote the cross-linking of PAA chains. Furthermore, a mathematical model was built to describe and regulate the surface topography growth process semi-quantitatively. The model fits experimental data quite well (adjusted R2 = 0.779). Results showed that the modified PEEK surface obtained superhydrophilicity. It significantly improved the adhesion and proliferation of BMSCs and MFBs by activating the FAK pathway and Rho family GTPase. The cellular affinity performed better when the surface topography was in network structure with holes in about 25 μm depth and 20–50 μm diameter. Good hydrophilicity seems necessary for the FAK pathway activation, but simply improving surface hydrophilicity might not be enough for cellular affinity improvement. Surface topography at micron scale should be a more important cue. This simple surface modification method could be contributed to further study of cell-microtopography interaction and have potential applications in clinical PEEK orthopedic implants.

Original languageEnglish
Article number213310
JournalBiomaterials Advances
Volume146
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2023

Keywords

  • Cell adhesion and proliferation
  • Polyetheretherketone (PEEK)
  • Regulatable topography
  • Superhydrophilicity
  • Surface modification

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