Since
the discovery of osteoinduction in the early 20th century, innovative
biomaterials with osteoinductive potential have emerged as candidates
for bone repair. Recently, artificial protocell models have demonstrated
great potential for tissue regeneration. Herein, we developed artificial
bioactive proto-osteocells by self-assembly of biodegradable biphasic-phosphate
particles in the form of aqueous bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2)-containing
Pickering emulsions in corn oil to fulfill the release of BMP2 with
controlled and local efficacy. These artificial proto-osteocells have
the advantage of (1) being directly injected into the target location
to avert reported side effects of BMP2, minimizing surgical complications,
(2) exhibiting the capability of osteoinduction as shown in both in
vitro and in vivo models, and (3) demonstrating calcific deposition
locally by utilizing the biodegradable calcium phosphate shell. The
efficiency of BMP2 within the artificial proto-osteocells showed 25
times greater bone-inducing potential when compared to the control.
This study demonstrates for the first time a new strategy toward utilizing
material-based artificial proto-osteocells to tackle medical issues
in bone tissue repair and regeneration.
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