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Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers

Natural teeth are supported by connective tissue collagen fibers that insert perpendicularly in the tooth cementum. Perpendicular insertion plays an important role in the maintenance of the junction between the oral epithelium and the periodontal connective tissue. Most titanium dental implant surfa...

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Autores principales: Nojiri, Toshiki, Chen, Chia-Yu, Kim, David M., Da Silva, John, Lee, Cliff, Maeno, Masahiko, McClelland, Arthur A., Tse, Bryan, Ishikawa-Nagai, Shigemi, Hatakeyama, Wataru, Kondo, Hisatomo, Nagai, Masazumi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6396481/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30823919
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-019-0467-1
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author Nojiri, Toshiki
Chen, Chia-Yu
Kim, David M.
Da Silva, John
Lee, Cliff
Maeno, Masahiko
McClelland, Arthur A.
Tse, Bryan
Ishikawa-Nagai, Shigemi
Hatakeyama, Wataru
Kondo, Hisatomo
Nagai, Masazumi
author_facet Nojiri, Toshiki
Chen, Chia-Yu
Kim, David M.
Da Silva, John
Lee, Cliff
Maeno, Masahiko
McClelland, Arthur A.
Tse, Bryan
Ishikawa-Nagai, Shigemi
Hatakeyama, Wataru
Kondo, Hisatomo
Nagai, Masazumi
author_sort Nojiri, Toshiki
collection PubMed
description Natural teeth are supported by connective tissue collagen fibers that insert perpendicularly in the tooth cementum. Perpendicular insertion plays an important role in the maintenance of the junction between the oral epithelium and the periodontal connective tissue. Most titanium dental implant surfaces have no micro or macro structure to support perpendicularly oriented collagen attachment. Without this tight biologic seal to resist bacterial invasion and epithelial downgrowth, progressive bone loss in peri-implantitis is seen around dental implants. The purpose of this study was to establish the perpendicularly oriented collagen attachment to titanium oxide nanotube (TNT), and to assess its binding stability. TNT was prepared on the titanium-surface by anodization. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) showed a regularly aligned TNT with an average 67 nm-diameter when anodized at 30 V for 3 h. Subsequently, collagen type I (CoI) was electrophoretically fused to anodic TNT in native polyacrylamide gel system where negatively charged CoI-C term was perpendicularly navigated to TNT. SEM and atomic force microscopy (AFM) were used to analyze CoI on the TiO(2) and TNT surface. Several tens of nanometers of CoI protrusion were recorded by AFM. These protrusions may be long enough to be priming sites for cell-secreted CoI. CoI laid parallel to the titanium surface when fused by a chemical linker. Binding resistance of CoI against drastic ultrasonication was measured by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy attenuated total reflection (FTIR-ATR). The electrophoretically fused CoI in the titanium nanotube (TNT–CoI(EPF)) showed the significantly greatest binding resistance than the other groups (P < 0.01, a 1-way ANOVA and Tukey HSD post hoc test). Furthermore, TNT–CoI(EPF) surface rejected epithelial cell stretching and epithelial sheet formation. Chemically linked horizontal CoI on titanium oxide (TiO(2)) facilitated epithelial cell stretching and sheet formation.
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spelling pubmed-63964812019-03-13 Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers Nojiri, Toshiki Chen, Chia-Yu Kim, David M. Da Silva, John Lee, Cliff Maeno, Masahiko McClelland, Arthur A. Tse, Bryan Ishikawa-Nagai, Shigemi Hatakeyama, Wataru Kondo, Hisatomo Nagai, Masazumi J Nanobiotechnology Research Natural teeth are supported by connective tissue collagen fibers that insert perpendicularly in the tooth cementum. Perpendicular insertion plays an important role in the maintenance of the junction between the oral epithelium and the periodontal connective tissue. Most titanium dental implant surfaces have no micro or macro structure to support perpendicularly oriented collagen attachment. Without this tight biologic seal to resist bacterial invasion and epithelial downgrowth, progressive bone loss in peri-implantitis is seen around dental implants. The purpose of this study was to establish the perpendicularly oriented collagen attachment to titanium oxide nanotube (TNT), and to assess its binding stability. TNT was prepared on the titanium-surface by anodization. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) showed a regularly aligned TNT with an average 67 nm-diameter when anodized at 30 V for 3 h. Subsequently, collagen type I (CoI) was electrophoretically fused to anodic TNT in native polyacrylamide gel system where negatively charged CoI-C term was perpendicularly navigated to TNT. SEM and atomic force microscopy (AFM) were used to analyze CoI on the TiO(2) and TNT surface. Several tens of nanometers of CoI protrusion were recorded by AFM. These protrusions may be long enough to be priming sites for cell-secreted CoI. CoI laid parallel to the titanium surface when fused by a chemical linker. Binding resistance of CoI against drastic ultrasonication was measured by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy attenuated total reflection (FTIR-ATR). The electrophoretically fused CoI in the titanium nanotube (TNT–CoI(EPF)) showed the significantly greatest binding resistance than the other groups (P < 0.01, a 1-way ANOVA and Tukey HSD post hoc test). Furthermore, TNT–CoI(EPF) surface rejected epithelial cell stretching and epithelial sheet formation. Chemically linked horizontal CoI on titanium oxide (TiO(2)) facilitated epithelial cell stretching and sheet formation. BioMed Central 2019-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6396481/ /pubmed/30823919 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-019-0467-1 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Nojiri, Toshiki
Chen, Chia-Yu
Kim, David M.
Da Silva, John
Lee, Cliff
Maeno, Masahiko
McClelland, Arthur A.
Tse, Bryan
Ishikawa-Nagai, Shigemi
Hatakeyama, Wataru
Kondo, Hisatomo
Nagai, Masazumi
Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
title Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
title_full Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
title_fullStr Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
title_full_unstemmed Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
title_short Establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type I collagen on TiO(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
title_sort establishment of perpendicular protrusion of type i collagen on tio(2) nanotube surface as a priming site of peri-implant connective fibers
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6396481/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30823919
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-019-0467-1
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