Literature DB >> 30953801

Polymer conjugation optimizes EDTA as a calcium-chelating agent that exclusively removes extrafibrillar minerals from mineralized collagen.

Jing-Mei Guo1, Pooyan Makvandi2, Chin-Chuan Wei3, Ji-Hua Chen4, Hua-Kun Xu5, Lorenzo Breschi6, David H Pashley7, Cui Huang8, Li-Na Niu9, Franklin R Tay10.   

Abstract

During development of mineralized collagenous tissues, intrafibrillar mineralization is achieved by preventing mineralization precursor inhibitors that are larger than 40 kDa from entering the collagen fibrils. Such a property is incorporated in the design of a calcium chelator for dentin bonding in the etch-and-rinse technique that selectively demineralizes extrafibrillar apatite while leaving the intrafibrillar minerals intact. This strategy prevents complete demineralization of collagen fibrils, avoids collapse of collagen that blocks resin infiltration after air-drying, and protects the completely demineralized fibrils from bacteria colonization and degradation by endogenous proteases after resin bonding. In the present study, a water-soluble glycol chitosan-EDTA (GCE) conditioner was synthesized by conjugation of EDTA, an effective calcium chelator, to high molecular weight glycol chitosan, which exhibits weak chelation property. The GCE conjugate was purified, characterized by FTIR, 1H NMR, isothermal titration calorimetry and ICP-AES, and subjected to size exclusion dialysis to recover molecules that are >40 kDa. The optimal concentration and application time for etching dentin were determined by bond strength testing to ensure that the dentin bonding results were comparable to phosphoric acid etching, and maintained equivalent bond strength after air-drying of the conditioned collagen matrix. Extrafibrillar demineralization was validated with transmission electron microscopy. Inhibition of endogenous dentin proteases was confirmed using in-situ zymography. The water-soluble GCE dentin conditioner was non-cytotoxic and possessed antibacterial activities against planktonic and single-species biofilms, supporting its ongoing development as a dentin conditioner with air-drying, anti-proteolytic and antibacterial properties to enhance the durability of bonds created using the etch-and-rinse bonding technique. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: The current state-of-the-art techniques for filling decayed teeth with plastic tooth-colored materials require conditioning the mineralized, biofilm-covered, decayed dentin with acids or acid resin monomers to create a surface layer of completely- or partially-demineralized collagen matrix for the infiltration of adhesive resin monomers. Nevertheless, fillings prepared using these strategies are not as durable as consumers have anticipated. Conjugation of polymeric glycol chitosan with EDTA produces a new conditioner for dentin bonding that demineralizes only extrafibrillar dentin, reduces endogenous protease activities and kills biofilm bacteria. The high molecular weight glycol chitosan-EDTA is non-cytotoxic to the key regenerative players within the dentin-pulp complex. This advance permits dry bonding and the use of hydrophobic resins. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anti-collagen degradation; Antibacterial; Calcium chelation; Conjugation; Extrafibrillar demineralization; Glycol chitosan-EDTA

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30953801     DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2019.04.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Biomater        ISSN: 1742-7061            Impact factor:   8.947


  2 in total

1.  A novel dentin bonding scheme based on extrafibrillar demineralization combined with covalent adhesion using a dry-bonding technique.

Authors:  F Yu; M L Luo; R C Xu; L Huang; H H Yu; M Meng; J Q Jia; Z H Hu; W Z Wu; F R Tay; Y H Xiao; L N Niu; J H Chen
Journal:  Bioact Mater       Date:  2021-03-23

2.  Effect of Cavity Cleanser With Long-Term Antibacterial and Anti-Proteolytic Activities on Resin-Dentin Bond Stability.

Authors:  Yaping Gou; Wei Jin; Yanning He; Yu Luo; Ruirui Si; Yuan He; Zhongchi Wang; Jing Li; Bin Liu
Journal:  Front Cell Infect Microbiol       Date:  2021-11-19       Impact factor: 5.293

  2 in total

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