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Dental enamel formation and implications for oral health and disease.

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TLDR
Key aspects of dental enamel formation are examined, from its developmental genesis to the ever-increasing wealth of data on the mechanisms mediating ionic transport, as well as the clinical outcomes resulting from abnormal ameloblast function.
Abstract
Dental enamel is the hardest and most mineralized tissue in extinct and extant vertebrate species and provides maximum durability that allows teeth to function as weapons and/or tools as well as for food processing. Enamel development and mineralization is an intricate process tightly regulated by cells of the enamel organ called ameloblasts. These heavily polarized cells form a monolayer around the developing enamel tissue and move as a single forming front in specified directions as they lay down a proteinaceous matrix that serves as a template for crystal growth. Ameloblasts maintain intercellular connections creating a semi-permeable barrier that at one end (basal/proximal) receives nutrients and ions from blood vessels, and at the opposite end (secretory/apical/distal) forms extracellular crystals within specified pH conditions. In this unique environment, ameloblasts orchestrate crystal growth via multiple cellular activities including modulating the transport of minerals and ions, pH regulation, proteolysis, and endocytosis. In many vertebrates, the bulk of the enamel tissue volume is first formed and subsequently mineralized by these same cells as they retransform their morphology and function. Cell death by apoptosis and regression are the fates of many ameloblasts following enamel maturation, and what cells remain of the enamel organ are shed during tooth eruption, or are incorporated into the tooth’s epithelial attachment to the oral gingiva. In this review, we examine key aspects of dental enamel formation, from its developmental genesis to the ever-increasing wealth of data on the mechanisms mediating ionic transport, as well as the clinical outcomes resulting from abnormal ameloblast function.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The hidden structure of human enamel.

TL;DR: It is shown that the crystalline c-axes are homogenously oriented in interrod crystals across most of the enamel layer thickness, and molecular dynamics simulations demonstrate that the observed mis-orientations of adjacent crystals induce crack deflection.
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Chemical gradients in human enamel crystallites.

TL;DR: The two additional layers of hierarchy of hydroxylapatite crystallites in human dental enamel suggest a possible new model for biological control over crystal growth during amelogenesis, and hint at implications for the preservation of biomarkers during tooth development.
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Controlling Enamel Remineralization by Amyloid-Like Amelogenin Mimics.

TL;DR: PTL/C-AMG film-coated enamel induced both of the in vivo and in vitro synthesis of HAp crystals, facilitated epitaxial growth ofHAp crystals and recovered the highly oriented structure and mechanical properties to levels nearly identical to those of natural enamel.
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Nature's design solutions in dental enamel: Uniting high strength and extreme damage resistance.

TL;DR: By analysing structure variations and the underlying mechanical mechanisms systematically, design principles which are the key for the development of advanced synthetic materials uniting high strength and toughness can be formulated.
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The role of salivary contents and modern technologies in the remineralization of dental enamel: a narrative review.

TL;DR: How salivary contents, like proteins and enzymes, have a natural role in enamel's mineralization is discussed, and the presence of ions, such as fluoride, calcium and phosphate, in saliva further enhances its capability to remineralize the demineralized enamel surface.
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Trending Questions (1)
How enamel of teeth is formed?

Enamel is formed by ameloblasts in a regulated process involving crystal growth on a protein matrix, mineral transport, pH regulation, and cell transformation, followed by apoptosis and shedding.