Bioheterojunction‐Engineered Polyetheretherketone Implants With Diabetic Infectious Micromilieu Twin‐Engine Powered Disinfection for Boosted Osteogenicity
Bin Li, Rui Shu, Wenyu Dai, Fan Yang, Hui Xu, Xiuyuan Shi, Yunfei Li, Ding Bai, Weizhong Yang, Yi Deng
Abstract
Abstract Diabetic infectious micromilieu (DIM) leads to a critical failure rate of osseointegration by virtue of two main peculiarities: high levels of topical glucose and inevitable infection. To tackle the daunting issue, a bioheterojunction‐engineered orthopedic polyetheretherketone (PEEK) implant consisting of copper sulfide/graphene oxide (CuS/GO) bioheterojunctions (bioHJs) and glucose oxidase (GO x ) is conceived and developed for DIM enhanced disinfection and boosted osseointegration. Under hyperglycemic micromilieu, GO x can convert surrounding glucose into hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ). Then, upon infectious micromilieu, the bioHJs enable the catalyzation of H 2 O 2 to highly germicidal hydroxyl radical (·OH). As a result, the engineered implants massacre pathogenic bacteria through DIM twin‐engine powered photo‐chemodynamic therapy in vitro and in vivo. In addition, the engineered implants considerably facilitate cell viability and osteogenic activity of osteoblasts under a hyperglycemic microenvironment via synergistic induction of copper ions (Cu 2+ ) and GO. In vivo studies using bone defect models of diabetic rats at 4 and 8 weeks further authenticate that bioHJ‐engineering PEEK implants substantially elevate their osseointegration through biofilm elimination and vascularization, as well as macrophage reprogramming. Altogether, the present study puts forward a tactic that arms orthopedic implants with DIM twin‐engine powered antibacterial and formidable osteogenic capacities for diabetic stalled osseointegration.