Author
Listed:
- Yu Qin
(Peking University
Peking University Third Hospital
Peking University Third Hospital)
- Zehao Jing
(Peking University Third Hospital
Peking University Third Hospital)
- Da Zou
(Peking University Third Hospital
Peking University Third Hospital)
- Youhao Wang
(Peking University Third Hospital
Peking University Third Hospital)
- Hongtao Yang
(Beihang University)
- Kai Chen
(Peking University)
- Weishi Li
(Peking University Third Hospital
Peking University Third Hospital)
- Peng Wen
(Tsinghua University)
- Yufeng Zheng
(Peking University)
Abstract
Metallic scaffolds have shown promise in regenerating critical bone defects. However, limitations persist in achieving a modulus below 100 MPa due to insufficient strength. Consequently, the osteogenic impact of lower modulus and greater bone tissue strain ( > 1%) remains unclear. Here, we introduce a metamaterial scaffold that decouples strength and modulus through two-stage deformation. The scaffold facilitates an effective modulus of only 13 MPa, ensuring adaptability during bone regeneration. Followed by a stiff stage, it provides the necessary strength for load-bearing requirements. In vivo, the scaffold induces > 2% callus strain, upregulating calcium channels and HIF-1α to enhance osteogenesis and angiogenesis. 4-week histomorphology reveals a 44% and 498% increase in new bone fraction versus classic scaffolds with 500 MPa and 13 MPa modulus, respectively. This design transcends traditional modulus-matching paradigms, prioritizing bone tissue strain requirements. Its tunable mechanical properties also present promising implications for advancing osteogenesis mechanisms and addressing clinical challenges.
Suggested Citation
Yu Qin & Zehao Jing & Da Zou & Youhao Wang & Hongtao Yang & Kai Chen & Weishi Li & Peng Wen & Yufeng Zheng, 2025.
"A metamaterial scaffold beyond modulus limits: enhanced osteogenesis and angiogenesis of critical bone defects,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-12, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-57609-9
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57609-9
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