4.8 Article

Polyelectrolyte-calcium complexes as a pre-precursor induce biomimetic mineralization of collagen

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 953-967

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0nr05640e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81970982, 81771120, 81801028]
  2. Zhejiang Key Research and Development Plan [2020C03037]
  3. Center of Cryo-Electron Microscopy, Zhejiang University (ZJU), China
  4. MOE Lab of Macromolecular Synthesis and Functionalization and Department of Polymer Science and Engineering, ZJU

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A novel polyelectrolyte-calcium complex pre-precursor (PCCP) process for collagen mineralization was proposed, in which liquid-like electropositive PAsp-Ca complexes infiltrate electronegative collagen fibrils, immobilized within the fibrils via chelation and hydrogen bonds, and prevent outward movement of free calcium ions while recruiting phosphate and hydroxide through electrostatic attractions. This process not only unites two distinct crystallization pathways but also provides a novel strategy for rapid biomimetic mineralization of collagen.
Polyelectrolytes such as polyaspartic acid (PAsp) are critical in biomimetic mineralization as stabilizers of amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) precursors and as nucleation inhibitors similar to non-collagenous proteins (NCPs). Nevertheless, the application of polyelectrolyte-calcium complexes as a pre-precursor, such as PAsp-Ca complexes, in the mineralization of collagen is unexplored. Herein, we propose a polyelectrolyte-Ca complex pre-precursor (PCCP) process for collagen mineralization. By combining three-dimensional (3D) STORM, potential measurements, and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy with molecular dynamics simulations, we show that liquid-like electropositive PAsp-Ca complexes along with free calcium ions infiltrate electronegative collagen fibrils. The PAsp-Ca complexes are immobilized within the fibrils via chelation and hydrogen bonds, and outward movement of free calcium ions is prevented while phosphate and hydroxide are recruited through electrostatic attractions. Afterwards, ACP instantly forms and gradually crystallizes. The PCCP process not only unites two distinct crystallization pathways (classical (free Ca/P ions) and non-classical (polyelectrolyte-Ca complexes)), but also provides a novel strategy for rapid biomimetic mineralization of collagen.

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