Electrospun nanofibers have received much attention as bone tissue-engineered scaffolds for their capacity to mimic the structure of natural extracellular matrix (ECM). Most studies have reproduced nanofibers with smooth surface for tissue engineering. This is quite different from the triple-helical nanotopography of natural collagen nanofibrils. In this study, hierarchical nanostructures were coated on the surface of drug-loaded core-shell nanofibers to mimic natural collagen nanofibrils. The nanoshish-kebab (SK) structure was decorated regularly on the surface of the nanofibers, and the inner-loaded bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) exhibited a gentle release pattern, similar to a zero-order release pattern in kinetics. The in vitro study also showed that the SK structure could accelerate cell proliferation, attachment, and osteogenic differentiation. Four groups of scaffolds were implanted in vivo to repair critical-sized rat calvarial defects: (1) PCL/PVA (control); (2) SK-PCL/PVA; (3) PCL/PVA-BMP2; and (4) SK-PCL/PVA-BMP2. Much more bone was formed in the SK-PCL/PVA group (24.57 ± 3.81%) than in the control group (1.21 ± 0.23%). The BMP2-loaded core-shell nanofibers with nanopatterned structure (SK-PCL/PVA-BMP2) displayed the best repair efficacy (76.38 ± 4.13%), followed by the PCL/PVA-BMP2 group (39.86 ± 5.74%). It was believed that the hierarchical nanostructured core-shell nanofibers could promote osteogeneration and that the SK structure showed synergistic ability with nanofiber-loaded BMP2 in vivo for bone regeneration. Thus, this BMP2-loaded core-shell nanofiber scaffold with hierarchical nanostructure holds great potential for bone tissue engineering applications.
Keywords: critical bone defect; drug delivery; electrospinning; polymer scaffold; surface topography; tissue engineering.