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Importance of Phosphorylation for Osteopontin Regulation of Biomineralization

TLDR
The hypotheses that the interaction of OPN with HA is determined by the extent of protein phosphorylation and that this interaction regulates the mineralization process are tested are tested.
Abstract
Previous in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that osteopontin (OPN) is an inhibitor of the formation and growth of hydroxyapatite (HA) and other biominerals. The present study tests the hypotheses that the interaction of OPN with HA is determined by the extent of protein phosphorylation and that this interaction regulates the mineralization process. Bone OPN as previously reported inhibited HA formation and HA-seeded growth in a gelatin-gel system. A transglutaminase-linked OPN polymer had similar effects. Recombinant, nonphosphorylated OPN and chemically dephosphorylated OPN, had no effect on HA formation or growth in this system. In contrast, highly phosphorylated milk OPN (mOPN) promoted HA formation. The mOPN stabilized the conversion of amorphous calcium phosphate (a noncrystalline constituent of milk) to HA, whereas bone OPN had a lesser effect on this conversion. Mixtures of OPN and osteocalcin known to form a complex in vitro, unexpectedly promoted HA formation. To test the hypothesis that small alterations in protein conformation caused by phosphorylation account for the differences in the observed ability of OPN to interact with HA, the conformation of bone OPN and mOPN in the presence and absence of crystalline HA was determined by attenuated total reflection (ATR) infrared (IR) spectroscopy. Both proteins exhibited a predominantly random coil structure, which was unaffected by the addition of Ca2+. Binding to HA did not alter the secondary structure of bone OPN, but induced a small increase of β-sheet (few percent) in mOPN. These data taken together suggest that the phosphorylation of OPN is an important factor in regulating the OPN-mediated mineralization process.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Bone structure and formation: A new perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new model to explain how intrafibrillar mineralization of collagen can be achieved during bone formation, which is based on the concept of intra-fibrilar mineralisation, which refers to the fact that growth of the mineral phase is somehow directed by the collagen matrix.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomimetic Systems for Hydroxyapatite Mineralization Inspired By Bone and Enamel

TL;DR: This review focuses on the formation of hydroxyapatite in synthetic systems designed primarily in the biomimetic context of bone or enamel mineralization for therapeutic approaches in repair of human tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomimetic Model Systems for Investigating the Amorphous Precursor Pathway and Its Role in Biomineralization

TL;DR: This review aims to provide a link between the prior literature and the new literature, which might be useful to newcomers in the field, and demonstrate that there may be certain unifying principles found in biomineral systems that seem widely diverse, such as from diatoms, to mollusk shells, to vertebrate bones and teeth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium phosphates in biomedical applications: materials for the future?

TL;DR: The aim of this manuscript is to highlight the tremendous improvements achieved in CaP materials research in the past 15 years, in particular in the field of biomineralization, as carrier for gene or ion delivery, as biologically active agent, and as bone graft substitute.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorylated proteins and control over apatite nucleation, crystal growth, and inhibition.

TL;DR: In the majority of mineralizing tissues in animal systems the same overall scheme of events is likely to apply, although the structural scaffolds and mineral types can vary greatly.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cloning and sequence analysis of rat bone sialoprotein (osteopontin) cDNA reveals an Arg-Gly-Asp cell-binding sequence

TL;DR: The results show that the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence also confers cell-binding properties on bone-specific sialoprotein, and the name "osteopontin" is proposed for this protein to better reflect the potential function of bone sIALoprotein.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new and convenient colorimetric determination of inorganic orthophosphate and its application to the assay of inorganic pyrophosphatase.

TL;DR: A new and convenient method for the determination of P i, measured colorimetrically, without reduction to molybdenum blue, by dissolving the whole assay mixture in acetone, where phosphomolybdate is bright yellow.
Journal ArticleDOI

A malachite green procedure for orthophosphate determination and its use in alkaline phosphatase-based enzyme immunoassay.

TL;DR: An improved procedure for phosphate determination based on a highly colored complex of phosphomolybdate and malachite green is described, resulting in a 4-fold increase in sensitivity and a 20-fold gain in sensitivity in terms of absorbance readings compared to the standard method based on rho-nitrophenol measurement.

Infrared spectroscopy of biomolecules

TL;DR: Theoretical analyses of the Amide I Infrared Bands of Globular Proteins (H. Torii & M. Tasumi) were carried out in this article, where the authors used the Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy of Enzyme Systems (J. Cohen and R. Hochstrasser).
Journal ArticleDOI

Flexible structures of SIBLING proteins, bone sialoprotein, and osteopontin.

TL;DR: Evidence that this entire SIBLING family of genetically related proteins that are clustered on human chromosome 4 is the result of duplication and subsequent divergent evolution of a single ancient gene is presented.
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