Dynamics of Renewal of Cell Populations of the Bone Tissue on the Surface of Titanium Implants with Bioactive Coating during Fracture Modeling in Rats.

2021 
Localization of PCNA, CD44, osteocalcin, Mdm2, p53, and caspase-3 on the surface of implant with calcium phosphate and hydroxyapatite coating was studied by immunocytochemical method in a model of femur fracture in rats. PCNA+, Ost+, CD44+, and Mdm2+ cells were found in the periosteum, in the layer of the outer surrounding plates, and in the connective tissue of the Haversian canals. Cell density increased on day 7 after fracture and then decreased by day 30. The number of p53+ and CASP3+ cells reached a maximum on day 14 (they were predominantly located in the periosteum and bone plates adjacent to it) and decreased by day 30. Calcium phosphate coating stimulated proliferative activity of cells at the early stages of the regeneration phase and apoptotic death at the later stages. Components of coating can be viewed as a positioning clue for differentiation of mesenchymal stromal cells. The effectiveness of reparative osteogenesis is determined by the balance of proliferative and destructive factors at the site of the fracture healing. This process can be optimized with various nanostructured materials with osteoinductive properties, in particular bioresorbable calcium phosphate coatings on titanium implants. However, the influence of these components on the state of cambial cells, their differentiation, and positioning in the repair zone is unknown.
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