Cerium (III) and (IV) containing mesoporous glasses/alginate beads for bone regeneration: bioactivity, biocompatibility and reactive oxygen species activity
E. Varini, S. Sanchez-Salcedo, G. Malavasi, G. Lusvardi, M., Vallet-Regi, A.J. Salinas

TL;DR
This study develops cerium-containing mesoporous glass/alginate beads that promote bone regeneration, exhibit antioxidant activity, and reduce oxidative stress, showing promise as bioactive, biocompatible scaffolds.
Contribution
It introduces a novel cerium-doped mesoporous glass/alginate bead system with antioxidant properties for bone regeneration, first demonstrating ROS mitigation capabilities.
Findings
Higher cerium content enhances catalase mimetic activity.
Beads with 1.2% and 3.6% CeO2 promote cell proliferation.
Beads are cytocompatible and reduce oxidative stress.
Abstract
A very small number of biomaterials investigated for bone regeneration was reported as able to prevent the oxidative stress. In this study beads based on alginate hydrogel and mesoporous glasses (MG) containing different amounts of cerium oxides (Ce3+/Ce4+) exhibiting antioxidant properties were investigated as a good approach to mimic the action of antioxidant enzymes in our organism. The effect of cerium contents on the bioactivity and biocompatibility of beads were investigated. Moreover, the potential capability of Ce-containing MG to prevent the oxidative stress caused by the activity of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was here investigated for the first time. The increment of cerium oxide from 1.2, to 3.6 and 5.3 mol-% decreases the surface area and porosity of MG and increases the catalase mimetic activity after 168 h. Swelling tests in different cell culture media (D- and…
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