Bacterial biosynthesis of a calcium phosphate bone-substitute material

AC Thackray, Rachel Sammons, Lynne Macaskie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A species of Serratia bacteria produces nano-crystalline hydroxyapatite (HA) crystals by use of a cell-bound phosphatase enzyme, located both periplasmically and within extracellular polymeric materials. The enzyme functions in resting cells by cleaving glycerol-2-phosphate (G-2-P) to liberate free phosphate ions which combine with calcium in solution to produce a cell-bound calcium phosphate material. Bacteria grown as a biofilm on polyurethane reticulated foam cubes were challenged with calcium and G-2-P in a bioreactor to produce a 3-D porous bone-substitute material. The scaffold has 1 mm macropores and 1 microm micropores. XRD showed the crystallites to be 25-28 nm in size, resembling HA before sintering and beta-tricalcium phosphate (beta-TCP, whitlockite) after. When biofilm was grown on titanium discs and challenged with calcium and G-2-P, a calcium phosphate layer formed on the discs. Biomineralisation is therefore a potential route to production of precursor nanophase HA, which has the potential to improve strength. The scaffold material produced by this method could be used as a bone-filler or as an alternative method for coating implants with a layer of HA.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)403-406
Number of pages4
JournalJournal of Materials Science
Volume15
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2004

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