Abstract
Silicon carbide (SiC)-coated carbon nanowalls (CNWs) have been proposed for use as implantable scaffold electrodes. Therefore, we investigated the effects of the SiC coating on CNWs and assessed the effects of the application of electrical stimulation (ES) on human mesenchymal stem cells cultured on SiC-coated CNWs. Measurements were conducted using immunofluorescence staining, proliferation assays, and quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. Our results showed that the SiC coating increased the cell adhesion area, and the combination of the SiC coating and ES promoted cell proliferation. Furthermore, ES enhanced osteogenic differentiation on CNWs, both with and without the SiC coating. In SiC-coated samples, the increase in wall thickness of CNWs by the SiC coating promoted neural differentiation. These findings indicate that scaffold electrodes composed of SiC-coated CNWs enhance cell adhesion and proliferation; the application of ES to such electrodes promotes osteogenic differentiation, while the SiC coating itself promotes neural differentiation.