| Literature DB >> 26052186 |
Abstract
Enamel is the bioceramic covering of teeth, a composite tissue composed of hierarchical organized hydroxyapatite crystallites fabricated by cells under physiologic pH and temperature. Enamel material properties resist wear and fracture to serve a lifetime of chewing. Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms for enamel formation may allow a biology-inspired approach to material fabrication based on self-assembling proteins that control form and function. Genetic understanding of human diseases expose insight from Nature's errors by exposing critical fabrication events that can be validated experimentally and duplicated in mice using genetic engineering to phenocopy the human disease so that it can be explored in detail. This approach led to assessment of amelogenin protein self-assembly which, when altered, disrupts fabrication of the soft enamel protein matrix. A misassembled protein matrix precursor results in loss of cell to matrix contacts essential to fabrication and mineralization.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26052186 PMCID: PMC4454482 DOI: 10.1007/s11837-015-1305-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JOM (1989) ISSN: 1047-4838 Impact factor: 2.471