4.7 Review

Limitations in Bonding to Dentin and Experimental Strategies to Prevent Bond Degradation

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 90, Issue 8, Pages 953-968

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0022034510391799

Keywords

bottom-up; biomimetic remineralization; chlorhexidine; collagen; cross-linking agents; cysteine cathepsins; degradation; esterase; ethanol wet-bonding; extracellular matrix proteins; hydrolysis; matrix metalloproteinases; resin monomers; top-down; water sorption

Funding

  1. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [R21 DE019213-02, R01 DE015306-06]

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The limited durability of resin-dentin bonds severely compromises the lifetime of tooth-colored restorations. Bond degradation occurs via hydrolysis of suboptimally polymerized hydrophilic resin components and degradation of water-rich, resin-sparse collagen matrices by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and cysteine cathepsins. This review examined data generated over the past three years on five experimental strategies developed by different research groups for extending the longevity of resin-dentin bonds. They include: (1) increasing the degree of conversion and esterase resistance of hydrophilic adhesives; (2) the use of broad-spectrum inhibitors of collagenolytic enzymes, including novel inhibitor functional groups grafted to methacrylate resins monomers to produce anti-MMP adhesives; (3) the use of cross-linking agents for silencing the activities of MMP and cathepsins that irreversibly alter the 3-D structures of their catalytic/allosteric domains; (4) ethanol wet-bonding with hydrophobic resins to completely replace water from the extrafibrillar and intrafibrillar collagen compartments and immobilize the collagenolytic enzymes; and (5) biomimetic remineralization of the water-filled collagen matrix using analogs of matrix proteins to progressively replace water with intrafibrillar and extrafibrillar apatites to exclude exogenous collagenolytic enzymes and fossilize endogenous collagenolytic enzymes. A combination of several of these strategies should result in overcoming the critical barriers to progress currently encountered in dentin bonding.

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