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Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth

Teeth with different chemical compositions can show vastly different physical properties, so knowledge of elemental composition is required to use animal teeth as substitutes for human teeth in research. In vitro, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), improved by calibration standards and Si(3...

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Autores principales: Möhring, Steffen, Cieplik, Fabian, Hiller, Karl-Anton, Ebensberger, Helga, Ferstl, Gerlinde, Hermens, Joshua, Zaparty, Melanie, Witzgall, Ralph, Mansfeld, Ulrich, Buchalla, Wolfgang, Scholz, Konstantin Johannes
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9965556/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36837152
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16041514
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author Möhring, Steffen
Cieplik, Fabian
Hiller, Karl-Anton
Ebensberger, Helga
Ferstl, Gerlinde
Hermens, Joshua
Zaparty, Melanie
Witzgall, Ralph
Mansfeld, Ulrich
Buchalla, Wolfgang
Scholz, Konstantin Johannes
author_facet Möhring, Steffen
Cieplik, Fabian
Hiller, Karl-Anton
Ebensberger, Helga
Ferstl, Gerlinde
Hermens, Joshua
Zaparty, Melanie
Witzgall, Ralph
Mansfeld, Ulrich
Buchalla, Wolfgang
Scholz, Konstantin Johannes
author_sort Möhring, Steffen
collection PubMed
description Teeth with different chemical compositions can show vastly different physical properties, so knowledge of elemental composition is required to use animal teeth as substitutes for human teeth in research. In vitro, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), improved by calibration standards and Si(3)N(4)-window material, enables determining local elemental compositions of inorganic and organic compounds without sample destruction. Six human molars, bovine incisors, murine incisors, and murine molars were analyzed. EDX-field scans and line scans were analyzed for elements Ca, P, O, C, N, F, Na, Mg, Fe, Cl, and S. Furthermore, Ca/P- and Ca/N-Ratios were calculated. The presence of iron in murine incisor enamel was investigated using additional wavelength dispersive X-ray spectroscopy measurements (WDX) near the enamel surface. Bovine and human enamel and dentin revealed close similarities regarding elemental composition. The median (25–75% percentiles) of At%Ca was 21.1 (20.8–21.3) in human enamel, 21.0 (20.7–21.2) in bovine enamel, and in murine enamel, 18.3 (17.85–18.88) for molars and 18.35 (18.00–18.75) for incisors. In dentin, murine teeth revealed a higher At%Ca compared to human and bovine teeth. Significant differences between human and bovine teeth were found for nitrogen in dentin, with a median of 4.5 (3.3–5) At%N for human dentin and 2.7 (2.3–3.2) At%N for bovine dentin. The Ca/P-Ratio was the highest in human and bovine enamel, which did not differ significantly. Enamel from murine molars had a higher Ca/P-Ratio than murine incisors and the highest Ca/P-Ratio in dentin was observed for human teeth and murine molars (1.49). WDX revealed iron in the outer 10 µm of pre- and post-eruptive enamel of murine incisors. Pre- and post-eruptive enamel on murine incisors only differed significantly in At%Ca (p = 0.041) and At%P (p = 0.026) with both At% higher in the pre-eruptive enamel. Murine teeth differ significantly from human and bovine teeth in terms of the elemental composition of enamel and dentin.
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spelling pubmed-99655562023-02-26 Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth Möhring, Steffen Cieplik, Fabian Hiller, Karl-Anton Ebensberger, Helga Ferstl, Gerlinde Hermens, Joshua Zaparty, Melanie Witzgall, Ralph Mansfeld, Ulrich Buchalla, Wolfgang Scholz, Konstantin Johannes Materials (Basel) Article Teeth with different chemical compositions can show vastly different physical properties, so knowledge of elemental composition is required to use animal teeth as substitutes for human teeth in research. In vitro, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), improved by calibration standards and Si(3)N(4)-window material, enables determining local elemental compositions of inorganic and organic compounds without sample destruction. Six human molars, bovine incisors, murine incisors, and murine molars were analyzed. EDX-field scans and line scans were analyzed for elements Ca, P, O, C, N, F, Na, Mg, Fe, Cl, and S. Furthermore, Ca/P- and Ca/N-Ratios were calculated. The presence of iron in murine incisor enamel was investigated using additional wavelength dispersive X-ray spectroscopy measurements (WDX) near the enamel surface. Bovine and human enamel and dentin revealed close similarities regarding elemental composition. The median (25–75% percentiles) of At%Ca was 21.1 (20.8–21.3) in human enamel, 21.0 (20.7–21.2) in bovine enamel, and in murine enamel, 18.3 (17.85–18.88) for molars and 18.35 (18.00–18.75) for incisors. In dentin, murine teeth revealed a higher At%Ca compared to human and bovine teeth. Significant differences between human and bovine teeth were found for nitrogen in dentin, with a median of 4.5 (3.3–5) At%N for human dentin and 2.7 (2.3–3.2) At%N for bovine dentin. The Ca/P-Ratio was the highest in human and bovine enamel, which did not differ significantly. Enamel from murine molars had a higher Ca/P-Ratio than murine incisors and the highest Ca/P-Ratio in dentin was observed for human teeth and murine molars (1.49). WDX revealed iron in the outer 10 µm of pre- and post-eruptive enamel of murine incisors. Pre- and post-eruptive enamel on murine incisors only differed significantly in At%Ca (p = 0.041) and At%P (p = 0.026) with both At% higher in the pre-eruptive enamel. Murine teeth differ significantly from human and bovine teeth in terms of the elemental composition of enamel and dentin. MDPI 2023-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9965556/ /pubmed/36837152 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16041514 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Möhring, Steffen
Cieplik, Fabian
Hiller, Karl-Anton
Ebensberger, Helga
Ferstl, Gerlinde
Hermens, Joshua
Zaparty, Melanie
Witzgall, Ralph
Mansfeld, Ulrich
Buchalla, Wolfgang
Scholz, Konstantin Johannes
Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth
title Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth
title_full Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth
title_fullStr Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth
title_full_unstemmed Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth
title_short Elemental Compositions of Enamel or Dentin in Human and Bovine Teeth Differ from Murine Teeth
title_sort elemental compositions of enamel or dentin in human and bovine teeth differ from murine teeth
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9965556/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36837152
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16041514
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