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RICHLAND,
Wash. – Bone and enamel start with the same calcium-phosphate
crystal building material but end up quite different
in structure and physical properties.
The difference in bone and enamel microstructure is
attributed to a key protein in enamel that molds crystals
into strands thousands of times longer and much stronger
than those in bone. The dimension of an enamel strand
is 100,000 by 50 by 25 nanometers; bone is 35 by 25
by 4 nanometers.
But how that protein achieves this feat of crystal-strand
shape-shifting has remained elusive. Today, scientists
have reported the first direct observation of how
this protein, amelogenin, interacts with crystals
like those in bone to form the hard, protective enamel
of teeth.
The study, published by a team from the Department
of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
and the University of Southern California on Friday
(Sept. 24) in Journal of Biological Chemistry, identifies
the region of the protein that interacts with the
enamel crystals. The results explain how 100 nanometer
spheres of amelogenin cluster like bowling balls around
developing enamel crystals, forcing the crystals to
elongate into thin, weaved strands that endow enamel
with the strength of steel.
The discovery is a milestone for those who would wish
to nano-engineer tissues, implants and synthetic coatings
based on nature’s rules.
“The proteins determine the crystal structure,” said
Wendy J. Shaw, lead author and PNNL staff scientist.
“Like bone, teeth are made of HAP, but the proteins
present when teeth form create enamel, a material
with entirely different properties from bone. If you
can control the interactions between proteins and
crystals, the same principal can be applied to nano-patterning
and nano-building.”
Shaw’s co-authors are PNNL chief scientist Allison
A. Campbell and Michael L. Paine and Malcolm L. Snead
of USC’s Center for Craniofacial Molecular Biology
in Los Angeles.
Earlier studies showed that mutated mice without amelogenin
produced defective enamel. Other experiments set out
to pinpoint the part of the protein responsible, pointing
researchers toward the protein’s so-called carboxyl
terminus—a region made up of many negatively charged
amino acids.
“People concentrated on this region,” according to
Shaw, “because it has several negatively charged groups
that are generally thought to interact with the positively
charged groups in hydroxyapatite’’—or HAP, the crystals
that make up bone and enamel.
A series of experiments confirmed that this region
played an important role in shaping HAP crystals.
Armed with this information, Shaw and colleagues set
out to prove that this carboxyl group was indeed the
business end of the protein.
To do that, they selected a form of amelogenin called
LRAP and isotopically labeled one of the charged amino
acids thought to be near LRAP’s surface. They put
the protein into contact with hydroxyapatite, a proxy
for developing enamel crystals, then took its picture.
In this case, the “camera” was a powerful nuclear
magnetic resonance instrument capable of recording
the positions of tagged protein atoms in relation
to the forming HAP crystals.
“There are only a handful of labs capable of doing
this,” Shaw said, “and there are more proteins than
there are people to look at them all.”
The NMR data complement previous results, suggesting
that protein’s function is to interact with HAP specifically.
The carboxyl terminus of the protein is later cleaved
by an enzyme, disrupting the protein-HAP interaction
and allowing the long, thin crystals to grow outward
as well, in three dimensions. The protein is cleaved
further still, Shaw said, and by the time the process
is complete, enamel is 99.9 percent crystal and no
protein.
PNNL ( www.pnl.gov ) is a DOE Office of Science
laboratory that solves complex problems in energy,
national security, the environment and life sciences
by advancing the understanding of physics, chemistry,
biology and computation. PNNL employs 3,800, has a
$600 million annual budget and has been managed by
Ohio-based Battelle since the lab's inception
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