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Dive into the research topics where Rina Tannenbaum is active.

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Featured researches published by Rina Tannenbaum.


Biomaterials | 2011

The effects of combined micron-/submicron-scale surface roughness and nanoscale features on cell proliferation and differentiation

Rolando A. Gittens; Taylor McLachlan; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Ye Cai; Simon Berner; Rina Tannenbaum; Zvi Schwartz; Kenneth H. Sandhage; Barbara D. Boyan

Titanium (Ti) osseointegration is critical for the success of dental and orthopedic implants. Previous studies have shown that surface roughness at the micro- and submicro-scales promotes osseointegration by enhancing osteoblast differentiation and local factor production. Only relatively recently have the effects of nanoscale roughness on cell response been considered. The aim of the present study was to develop a simple and scalable surface modification treatment that introduces nanoscale features to the surfaces of Ti substrates without greatly affecting other surface features, and to determine the effects of such superimposed nano-features on the differentiation and local factor production of osteoblasts. A simple oxidation treatment was developed for generating controlled nanoscale topographies on Ti surfaces, while retaining the starting micro-/submicro-scale roughness. Such nano-modified surfaces also possessed similar elemental compositions, and exhibited similar contact angles, as the original surfaces, but possessed a different surface crystal structure. MG63 cells were seeded on machined (PT), nano-modified PT (NMPT), sandblasted/acid-etched (SLA), and nano-modified SLA (NMSLA) Ti disks. The results suggested that the introduction of such nanoscale structures in combination with micro-/submicro-scale roughness improves osteoblast differentiation and local factor production, which, in turn, indicates the potential for improved implant osseointegration in vivo.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2013

The Roles of Titanium Surface Micro/Nanotopography and Wettability on the Differential Response of Human Osteoblast Lineage Cells

Rolando A. Gittens; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Alice Cheng; David M. Anderson; Taylor McLachlan; Ingrid Stephan; Jürgen Geis-Gerstorfer; Kenneth H. Sandhage; Andrei G. Fedorov; Frank Rupp; Barbara D. Boyan; Rina Tannenbaum; Zvi Schwartz

Surface micro- and nanostructural modifications of dental and orthopedic implants have shown promising in vitro, in vivo and clinical results. Surface wettability has also been suggested to play an important role in osteoblast differentiation and osseointegration. However, the available techniques to measure surface wettability are not reliable on clinically relevant, rough surfaces. Furthermore, how the differentiation state of osteoblast lineage cells impacts their response to micro/nanostructured surfaces, and the role of wettability on this response, remain unclear. In the current study, surface wettability analyses (optical sessile drop analysis, environmental scanning electron microscopic analysis and the Wilhelmy technique) indicated hydrophobic static responses for deposited water droplets on microrough and micro/nanostructured specimens, while hydrophilic responses were observed with dynamic analyses of micro/nanostructured specimens. The maturation and local factor production of human immature osteoblast-like MG63 cells was synergistically influenced by nanostructures superimposed onto microrough titanium (Ti) surfaces. In contrast, human mesenchymal stem cells cultured on micro/nanostructured surfaces in the absence of exogenous soluble factors exhibited less robust osteoblastic differentiation and local factor production compared to cultures on unmodified microroughened Ti. Our results support previous observations using Ti6Al4V surfaces showing that recognition of surface nanostructures and subsequent cell response is dependent on the differentiation state of osteoblast lineage cells. The results also indicate that this effect may be partly modulated by surface wettability. These findings support the conclusion that the successful osseointegration of an implant depends on contributions from osteoblast lineage cells at different stages of osteoblast commitment.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2012

Effect of cleaning and sterilization on titanium implant surface properties and cellular response

Jung Hwa Park; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Robert E. Baier; Anne E. Meyer; Rina Tannenbaum; Barbara D. Boyan; Zvi Schwartz

Titanium (Ti) has been widely used as an implant material due to the excellent biocompatibility and corrosion resistance of its oxide surface. Biomaterials must be sterile before implantation, but the effects of sterilization on their surface properties have been less well studied. The effects of cleaning and sterilization on surface characteristics were bio-determined using contaminated and pure Ti substrata first manufactured to present two different surface structures: pretreated titanium (PT, Ra=0.4 μm) (i.e. surfaces that were not modified by sandblasting and/or acid etching); (SLA, Ra=3.4 μm). Previously cultured cells and associated extracellular matrix were removed from all bio-contaminated specimens by cleaning in a sonicator bath with a sequential acetone-isopropanol-ethanol-distilled water protocol. Cleaned specimens were sterilized with autoclave, gamma irradiation, oxygen plasma, or ultraviolet light. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), contact angle measurements, profilometry, and scanning electron microscopy were used to examine surface chemical components, hydrophilicity, roughness, and morphology, respectively. Small organic molecules present on contaminated Ti surfaces were removed with cleaning. XPS analysis confirmed that surface chemistry was altered by both cleaning and sterilization. Cleaning and sterilization affected hydrophobicity and roughness. These modified surface properties affected osteogenic differentiation of human MG63 osteoblast-like cells. Specifically, autoclaved SLA surfaces lost the characteristic increase in osteoblast differentiation seen on starting SLA surfaces, which was correlated with altered surface wettability and roughness. These data indicated that recleaned and resterilized Ti implant surfaces cannot be considered the same as the first surfaces in terms of surface properties and cell responses. Therefore, the reuse of Ti implants after resterilization may not result in the same tissue responses as found with never-before-implanted specimens.


Biomaterials | 2012

The responses to surface wettability gradients induced by chitosan nanofilms on microtextured titanium mediated by specific integrin receptors

Jung Hwa Park; Christine E. Wasilewski; Noelia Almodovar; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Barbara D. Boyan; Rina Tannenbaum; Zvi Schwartz

Microtexture and chemistry of implant surfaces are important variables for modulating cellular responses. Surface chemistry and wettability are connected directly. While each of these surface properties can influence cell response, it is difficult to decouple their specific contributions. To address this problem, the aims of this study were to develop a surface wettability gradient with a specific chemistry without altering micron scale roughness and to investigate the role of surface wettability on osteoblast response. Microtextured sandblasted/acid-etched (SLA, Sa = 3.1 μm) titanium disks were treated with oxygen plasma to increase reactive oxygen density on the surface. At 0, 2, 6, 10, and 24 h after removing them from the plasma, the surfaces were coated with chitosan for 30 min, rinsed and dried. Modified SLA surfaces are denoted as SLA/h in air prior to coating. Surface characterization demonstrated that this process yielded differing wettability (SLA0 < SLA2 < SLA10 < SLA24) without modifying the micron scale features of the surface. Cell number was reduced in a wettability-dependent manner, except for the most water-wettable surface, SLA24. There was no difference in alkaline phosphatase activity with differing wettability. Increased wettability yielded increased osteocalcin and osteoprotegerin production, except on the SLA24 surfaces. mRNA for integrins α1, α2, α5, β1, and β3 was sensitive to surface wettability. However, surface wettability did not affect mRNA levels for integrin α3. Silencing β1 increased cell number with reduced osteocalcin and osteoprotegerin in a wettability-dependent manner. Surface wettability as a primary regulator enhanced osteoblast differentiation, but integrin expression and silencing β1 results indicate that surface wettability regulates osteoblast through differential integrin expression profiles than microtexture does. The results may indicate that both microtexture and wettability with a specific chemistry have important regulatory effects on osseointegration. Each property had different effects, which were mediated by different integrin receptors.


Journal of Dental Research | 2011

Electrical Implications of Corrosion for Osseointegration of Titanium Implants

Rolando A. Gittens; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Rina Tannenbaum; Barbara D. Boyan; Zvi Schwartz

The success rate of titanium implants for dental and orthopedic applications depends on the ability of surrounding bone tissue to integrate with the surface of the device, and it remains far from ideal in patients with bone compromised by physiological factors. The electrical properties and electrical stimulation of bone have been shown to control its growth and healing and can enhance osseointegration. Bone cells are also sensitive to the chemical products generated during corrosion events, but less is known about how the electrical signals associated with corrosion might affect osseointegration. The metallic nature of the materials used for implant applications and the corrosive environments found in the human body, in combination with the continuous and cyclic loads to which these implants are exposed, may lead to corrosion and its corresponding electrochemical products. The abnormal electrical currents produced during corrosion can convert any metallic implant into an electrode, and the negative impact on the surrounding tissue due to these extreme signals could be an additional cause of poor performance and rejection of implants. Here, we review basic aspects of the electrical properties and electrical stimulation of bone, as well as fundamental concepts of aqueous corrosion and its electrical and clinical implications.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2012

Effects of structural properties of electrospun TiO2 nanofiber meshes on their osteogenic potential.

Xiaokun Wang; Rolando A. Gittens; Rosemary Song; Rina Tannenbaum; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Zvi Schwartz; Haifeng Chen; Barbara D. Boyan

Ideal outcomes in the field of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine involve biomaterials that can enhance cell differentiation and production of local factors for natural tissue regeneration without the use of systemic drugs. Biomaterials typically used in tissue engineering applications include polymeric scaffolds that mimic the three-dimensional structural environment of the native tissue, but these are often functionalized with proteins or small peptides to improve their biological performance. For bone applications, titanium implants, or more appropriately the TiO2 passive oxide layer formed on their surface, have been shown to enhance osteoblast differentiation in vitro and to promote osseointegration in vivo. In this study we evaluated the effect on osteoblast differentiation of pure TiO2 nanofiber meshes with different surface microroughness and nanofiber diameters, prepared by the electrospinning method. MG63 cells were seeded on TiO2 meshes, and cell number, differentiation markers and local factor production were analyzed. The results showed that cells grew throughout the entire surfaces and with similar morphology in all groups. Cell number was sensitive to surface microroughness, whereas cell differentiation and local factor production was regulated by both surface roughness and nanofiber diameter. These results indicate that scaffold structural cues alone can be used to drive cell differentiation and create an osteogenic environment without the use of exogenous factors.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010

Capture/release ability of thermo-responsive polymer particles

Brian Simpson; Grady A. Nunnery; Rina Tannenbaum; Kyriaki Kalaitzidou

Strain engineering was used to make polymer particles that are able to reversibly alter their geometry from three dimensional tubes to two dimensional layers and consequently alter their properties upon changes in temperature. A bilayer of two dissimilar materials, one being a polymer, was deposited on a sacrificial substrate and polymer tubes were formed due to the release of the interfacial residual stress upon removal of the sacrificial substrate. The bilayer consisted of a polydimethysiloxane (PDMS) film with a thickness of several microns coated with a nanometer-thick gold (Au) film. Alternatively, SiC was used instead of Au to demonstrate that the fabrication method can be applied using any two dissimilar materials. The diameter and length of the resulting polymer tubes can be tuned through the thickness of the bilayer and the processing conditions used. The modulus and geometric characteristics of these polymer particles were also determined. Finally, the ability of using these polymer particles as delivery vesicles was demonstrated through selective capture and controllable release of a fluorescently-labelled polymer such as poly(ethylene glycol), which was adsorbed only on the Au and not the PDMS surface of the polymer particles.


Langmuir | 2009

Bulk and Surface Assembly of Branched Amphiphilic Polyhedral Oligomer Silsesquioxane Compounds

Ray Gunawidjaja; Feifei Huang; Maryana Gumenna; Nina Klimenko; Grady A. Nunnery; V.V. Shevchenko; Rina Tannenbaum; Vladimir V. Tsukruk

This study probes the behavior of two series of organic-functionalized core-shell silsesquioxane (POSS-M)p-(x/y) derivatives with various hydrophobic-hydrophilic terminal group compositions in the bulk state and within mono- and multilayered films at the air-water interface and on solid surface. POSS-M refers to mixed silsesquioxane cores, in contrast to the geometrically specific POSS compounds. It is composed of polyhedra, incompletely condensed polyhedra, ladder-type structures, linear structures, and all the possible combinations thereof and attracts great interest because of its facile preparation, low polydispersity, high yield, and low cost. The two series of (POSS-M)p-(x/y) molecules are different in hydrophobic-hydrophilic balance of their terminal groups, with x and y respectively referring to the molar percent of -OCONH-C(18)H(37) tails and -OH for p = 1 and the percent of -OCONH-C(18)H(37) tails and -OCO-C(6)H(4)COOH terminal groups for p = 2. In the bulk state, the presence of aromatic rings in (POSS-M)2-(x/y) series resulted in a lower symmetry crystal structure than the (POSS-M)1-(x/y) series. Moreover, the (POSS-M)p-(x/y) molecules that contain a sufficient amount of -OCONH-C(18)H(37) tails exhibit double endothermic transition, which attributed to the melting of alkyl chains followed by the melting of the unit cells of (POSS-M) cores. The surface morphologies for the various hydrophobic-hydrophilic combinations at surface pressure p = 0.5 mN/m are similar to that observed for the classical amphiphilic star polymers. However, at higher surface pressure (p > or = 5 mN/m), the POSS-M compounds with lower content of hydrophilic groups form a uniform monolayer.


Biomaterials | 2012

Use of polyelectrolyte thin films to modulate Osteoblast response to microstructured titanium surfaces

Jung Hwa Park; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Christine E. Wasilewski; Barbara D. Boyan; Rina Tannenbaum; Zvi Schwartz

The microstructure and wettability of titanium (Ti) surfaces directly impact osteoblast differentiation in vitro and in vivo. These surface properties are important variables that control initial interactions of an implant with the physiological environment, potentially affecting osseointegration. The objective of this study was to use polyelectrolyte thin films to investigate how surface chemistry modulates response of human MG63 osteoblast-like cells to surface microstructure. Three polyelectrolytes, chitosan, poly(L-glutamic acid), and poly(L-lysine), were used to coat Ti substrates with two different microtopographies (PT, Sa = 0.37 μm and SLA, Sa = 2.54 μm). The polyelectrolyte coatings significantly increased wettability of PT and SLA without altering micron-scale roughness or morphology of the surface. Enhanced wettability of all coated PT surfaces was correlated with increased cell numbers whereas cell number was reduced on coated SLA surfaces. Alkaline phosphatase specific activity was increased on coated SLA surfaces than on uncoated SLA whereas no differences in enzyme activity were seen on coated PT compared to uncoated PT. Culture on chitosan-coated SLA enhanced osteocalcin and osteoprotegerin production. Integrin expression on smooth surfaces was sensitive to surface chemistry, but microtexture was the dominant variable in modulating integrin expression on SLA. These results suggest that surface wettability achieved using different thin films has a major role in regulating osteoblast response to Ti, but this is dependent on the microtexture of the substrate.


Langmuir | 2011

Enhancement of Surface Wettability via the Modification of Microtextured Titanium Implant Surfaces with Polyelectrolytes

Jung Hwa Park; Zvi Schwartz; Rene Olivares-Navarrete; Barbara D. Boyan; Rina Tannenbaum

Micrometer- and submicrometer-scale surface roughness enhances osteoblast differentiation on titanium (Ti) substrates and increases bone-to-implant contact in vivo. However, the low surface wettability induced by surface roughness can retard initial interactions with the physiological environment. We examined chemical modifications of Ti surfaces [pretreated (PT), R(a) ≤ 0.3 μm; sand blasted/acid etched (SLA), R(a) ≥ 3.0 μm] in order to modify surface hydrophilicity. We designed coating layers of polyelectrolytes that did not alter the surface microstructure but increased surface ionic character, including chitosan (CHI), poly(L-glutamic acid) (PGA), and poly(L-lysine) (PLL). Ti disks were cleaned and sterilized. Surface chemical composition, roughness, wettability, and morphology of surfaces before and after polyelectrolyte coating were examined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), contact mode profilometry, contact angle measurement, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). High-resolution XPS spectra data validated the formation of polyelectrolyte layers on top of the Ti surface. The surface coverage of the polyelectrolyte adsorbed on Ti surfaces was evaluated with the pertinent SEM images and XPS peak intensity as a function of polyelectrolyte adsorption time on the Ti surface. PLL was coated in a uniform thin layer on the PT surface. CHI and PGA were coated evenly on PT, albeit in an incomplete monolayer. CHI, PGA, and PLL were coated on the SLA surface with complete coverage. The selected polyelectrolytes enhanced surface wettability without modifying surface roughness. These chemically modified surfaces on implant devices can contribute to the enhancement of osteoblast differentiation.

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Hamid Garmestani

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Karl I. Jacob

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Il Tae Kim

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Grady A. Nunnery

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Melissa Zubris

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Barbara D. Boyan

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Rene Olivares-Navarrete

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Zvi Schwartz

Virginia Commonwealth University

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