Structural and composition studies on the mineral of newly formed dental enamel: A chemical, X-ray diffraction, and 31p and proton nuclear magnetic resonance study

Author:

Bonar Laurence C.1,Shimizu Masaharu2,Roberts James E.3,Griffin Robert G.2,Glimcher Melvin J.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Skeletal Disorders and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

2. School of Dental Medicine, Tsurumi University, Yokohama, Japan

3. Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge

Abstract

Abstract The present report describes a study of the development and maturation of the mineral component of dental enamel. We prepared porcine enamel of different stages of maturation, from the very immature enamel of unerupted teeth, with a mineral content of 45%, to fully mature enamel, with a mineral content of ∼99%. We fractionated the less mature enamel by density centrifugation and examined the enamel density fractions and unfractionated enamel by a variety of chemical and physical techniques, including conventional and radial distribution function x-ray diffraction analysis, conventional and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, 31P and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and chemical analysis. The three most immature preparations, from unerupted teeth, had mineral contents of 45, 67, and 91 and Ca/P molar ratios of 1.41, 1.44, and 1.47. Density distribution histograms of the three fractions show that the early maturation of dental enamel mineral is accompanied by an increase in tissue density, reflecting the increase in mineral content. The density distribution in each sample is relatively narrow, indicating that the maturation process occurs at a fairly homogeneous rate, with all enamel in an anatomically defined zone mineralizing to about the same extent. X-ray diffraction studies indicate that even the least mature, least mineralized of these immature samples is considerably more crystalline than the most mature bone mineral studied and that crystalline perfection of the enamel crystals increases further with maturation. Both the a and c axes of the mineral unit cell expand significantly during early stages of maturation. Solid-state 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies indicate that dental enamel contains a DCPD-like HPO4 component in an apatitic lattice, similar to the component previously observed in bone and some synthetic calcium phosphates. The proportion of this DCPD-like component decreases with maturation but is readily detectable even in fully mature enamel. The infrared spectroscopic studies indicate that the 3570 cm−1 band ascribed to the OH− group of the hydroxyapatite crystals is absent in the least mature enamel but can be detected and becomes progressively stronger as the enamel becomes more mature. The increase in the content of the OH− groups of the apatite crystals is concomitant with the observed increase in unit cell parameters. Similar studies on very young and very old mature bone of four different species failed to detect the presence of OH− groups.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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