INVESTIGADORES
FAGALI Natalia Soledad
artículos
Título:
Cytotoxicity of corrosion products of degradable Fe-based stents: Relevance of pH and insoluble products
Autor/es:
FAGALI NS; GRILLO CA; PUNTARULO S; FERNÁNDEZ LORENZO MA
Revista:
COLLOIDS AND SURFACES B-BIOINTERFACES
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2015 vol. 128 p. 480 - 488
ISSN:
0927-7765
Resumen:
Fe-based Biodegradable Metallic Materials (Fe-BMMs) have been proposed for cardiovascular applications and are expected to disappear via corrosion after an appropriate period. However, in vivo studies showed that Fe ions release leads to accumulation of orange and brownish insoluble products at the biomaterial/cell interface. As an additional consequence, sharp changes in pH may affect the biocompatibility of these materials. In the present work, the experimental protocols were designed with the aim of evaluating the relative importance that these factors have on biocompatibility evaluation of BMMs. Mitochondrial activity (MTT assay) and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) assay on mammalian cells, exposed to 1-5 mM of added Fe3+ salt, were assessed and compared with results linked exclusively to pH effects. Soluble Fe concentration in culture medium and intracellular Fe content were also determined. The results showed that: i)mitochondrial activity was affected by pH changes in all the concentration range of added Fe3+ assayed, ii) at the highest added Fe3+ concentrations (≥3 mM), precipitation was detected and the cells were able to incorporate the precipitate, that seems to be linked to cell damage, iii) the extent of precipitation depends on the Fe/protein concentration ratio; and iv) lipid peroxidation products were detected in all the concentration range of added Fe3+. Hence, a new approach opens in the biocompatibility evaluation of Fe-based BMMs, since the cytotoxicity would not be solely a function of released (and soluble) ions but of the insoluble degradation product amount and the pH falling at the biomaterial/cell interface. The concentration of Fe-containing products at the interface depends on diffusional conditions in a very complex way that should be carefully analyzed in the future.