PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2025

Injectable Piezoelectric Hydrogel for Vital Pulp Therapy

Solanki V, Montoya C, et al.

Journal of Functional Biomaterials

Temple University, University of Alberta

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study presents a light-curable, injectable piezoelectric gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) hydrogel containing barium titanate nanoparticles designed for vital pulp therapy. The hydrogel demonstrated excellent injectability (<1 kgf), stable viscoelastic properties, and the ability to generate physiologically relevant electrical signals under cyclic compressive loading that mimics mastication. Human dental pulp stem cells cultured on the piezoelectric hydrogel exhibited enhanced metabolic activity and significantly upregulated odontogenic and dentin matrix genes, including ALP, COL1A1, DSPP, and DMP1, compared to a commercial calcium silicate cement (Biodentine XP) and non-piezoelectric controls. Cyclic mechanical loading amplified these regenerative responses, indicating that mechanically induced bioelectric cues accelerate odontogenic differentiation and matrix maturation. Overall, the work establishes piezoelectric hydrogels as self-powered, bioactive pulp-capping materials that convert physiological forces into regenerative signals for dentin–pulp complex repair. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture TX

The MechanoCulture TX was used to apply controlled cyclic compressive loading to hydrogel–cell constructs to simulate mastication-like forces during in vitro dentin regeneration studies. Human dental pulp stem cells cultured on piezoelectric and control materials were subjected to cyclic loading five times per day, with compressive forces adjusted between 0.5 and 3 N at defined frequencies. This dynamic mechanical environment enabled evaluation of how repeated physiological loading influences cell viability and odontogenic gene expression. The MechanoCulture TX provided precise, reproducible mechanical stimulation essential for activating the piezoelectric response of the hydrogel and for demonstrating the synergistic effect of mechanical loading and bioelectric signaling on dentin–pulp regeneration. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
AUTHORS

Varun Solanki, Carolina Montoya, Prasanna Neelakantan, Maobin Yang, Santiago Orrego.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Journal of Functional Biomaterials

YEAR

2025

INSTITUTIONS

Temple University, University of Alberta

COUNTRIES

Canada, United States

INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture TX

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Dental & Oral Tissue BiomechanicsHydrogel Mechanical TestingInjectable & Regenerative BiomaterialsMechanotransductionStem Cell MechanobiologyStimuli Responsive Hydrogels Characterization

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