4.7 Article

The mineralization process of insoluble elastin fibrillar structures: Ionic environment vs degradation

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages 693-706

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2020.01.250

Keywords

Elastolysis; Calcification; Hydroxyapatite

Funding

  1. PXE Italia Onlus (Italy) [E96C18000600007]

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Despite its long half-life and physiological role, elastin undergoes irreversible changes (i.e elastolysis and/or calcification) impairing resilience of soft connective tissues. At present, it is still undefined: 1) to which extent elastin fibers have to be fragmented in order to increase their susceptibility to calcify; 2) which is the contribution of ionic environment on elastin mineralization; 3) why, in the same tissue area, mineralized coexist with nonmineralized fibers. The in vitro mineralization process was investigated on insoluble elastin, hydrolyzed or nothydrolyzed, and incubated in different cell-free ionic environments. Mineral deposition is favored on hydrolyzed fibrillar structures due to exposure of multiple charged sites increasing the adsorption of Ca2+ that can attract phosphate and increase the local ion concentration over the point of supersaturation, representing the minimum requirement for hydroxyapatite nudeation sites. At physiological pH, the degree of elastin mineralization is influenced by hydrolysis and complexity of medium composition, since ionic species, as sodium, potassium, magnesium, in addition to calcium and phosphorus, interfere with the calcification process. These findings broaden the knowledge on the factors controlling hydroxyapatite deposition on insoluble elastin and can also explain why, in vivo, calcified and non-calcified fibers can be observed within the same tissue. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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