| Literature DB >> 22589057 |
Gennady V Lubarsky1, Raechelle A D'Sa, Sanjukta Deb, Brian J Meenan, Patrick Lemoine.
Abstract
Characterisation of the electrostatic properties of dental enamel is important for understanding the interfacial processes that occur on a tooth surface and how these relate to the natural ability of our teeth to withstand chemical attack from the acids in many soft drinks. Whereas, the role of the mineral component of the tooth enamel in providing this resistance to acid erosion has been studied extensively, the influence of proteins that are also present within the structure is not well understood. In this paper, we report for the first time the use of double-layer force spectroscopy to directly measure electrostatic forces on as received and hydrazine-treated (deproteinated) enamel surfaces in solutions with different pH to determine how the enamel proteins influence acid erosion surface potential and surface charge of human dental enamel. The deproteination of the treated samples was confirmed by the loss of the amide bands (~1,300-1,700 cm(-1)) in the FTIR spectrum of the sample. The force characteristics observed were found to agree with the theory of electrical double layer interaction under the assumption of constant potential and allowed the surface charge per unit area to be determined for the two enamel surfaces. The values and, importantly, the sign of these adsorbed surface charges indicates that the protein content of dental enamel contributes significantly to the electrostatic double layer formation near the tooth surface and in doing so can buffer the apatite crystals against acid attack. Moreover, the electrostatic interactions within this layer are a driving factor for the mineral transfer from the tooth surface and the initial salivary pellicle formation.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22589057 PMCID: PMC4875143 DOI: 10.1007/s13758-011-0014-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biointerphases ISSN: 1559-4106 Impact factor: 2.456
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of crystal orientation of hydroxyapatite crystallites in enamel keyhole-shape rod unit showing the mineral and organic matrix composite structure
Composition of SAGF medium (from Ref. [25])
| Compound | Concentration (mg l−1) | Compound | Concentration (mg l−1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| NaCl | 125.6 | Urea | 200.0 |
| KCl | 963.9 | Na2SO4, 10H2O | 763.2 |
| KSCN | 189.2 | NH4Cl | 178.0 |
| KH2PO4 | 654.5 | CaCl2, 2H2O | 227.8 |
| Urea | 200.0 | NaHCO3 | 630.8 |
Fig. 2Schematic drawing of the experimental three-electrode set up
Fig. 3Topography images of deproteinated (a, b) and as received (c) enamel surfaces in SAGF solution with pH 6.8 obtained by deflection contact mode AFM
Fig. 4FTIR spectra of dental enamel before and after deproteination
Fig. 5Approaching force curves obtained using various tip voltages on as received tooth enamel surface in SAGF medium with pH 6.8
Fig. 6Approaching force curves for as received and deproteinated tooth enamel surfaces immersed in SAGF medium with pH 6.8 (a, b) and SAGF medium with pH 4.2 (c, d). Solid lines are best fits to the DVLO theory (see Table 2). Grey areas show schematically the Debye length calculated for SAGF media
Electrical surface potentials of tooth enamel surfaces obtained by fitting the experimental force curves to the DVLO theory under constant potential assumption
| Sample/medium | Surface potential, | Surface charge, |
|---|---|---|
| As received enamel in SAGF, pH 6.8 | −70 ± 3 | −0.0064 |
| As received enamel in SAGF, pH 4.2 | −120 ± 4 | −0.0102 |
| Deproteinated enamel in SAGF, pH 6.8 | −35 ± 2 | −0.0032 |
| Deproteinated enamel in SAGF, pH 4.2 | +10 ± 2 | 0.0009 |