4.8 Article

Reactivation of inactivated endogenous proteolytic activities in phosphoric acid-etched dentine by etch-and-rinse adhesives

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 27, Issue 25, Pages 4470-4476

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2006.01.040

Keywords

fluorometric enzymatic assay; acid-etched dentine; etch-and-rinse adhesives; proteolytic activity; fluorescence; collagen degradation

Funding

  1. NIDCR NIH HHS [R01 DE015306, R01 DE014911] Funding Source: Medline

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Auto-degradation of collagen matrices occurs in resin-infiltrated dentine by the slow action of host-derived matrix metalloproteinases. As phosphoric acid-etching inactivates these endogenous enzymes, it is puzzling how hybrid layers created by simplified etch-and-rinse adhesives can degrade in vivo. This study tested the null hypothesis that there are no differences in the relative proteolytic activities of mineralised dentine, acid-etched dentine, and etch-and-rinse adhesivetreated acid-etched dentine. Powdered dentine prepared from extracted human teeth was treated with 17% EDTA, 10% phosphoric acid, or with five simplified etch-and-rinse adhesives that were applied to 10% phosphoric acid-etched dentine. The gelatinolytic activity of the dentine powder was assayed using fluorescein-labelled gelatine. TEM examination of the air-dried, treated dentine powder was performed to confirm the presence of remnant mineralised dentine after acid-etching. 17% EDTA significantly reduced the relative proteolytic activity (73.2%) of the untreated mineralised dentine powder (control), while 10% phosphoric acid-etched dentine exhibited the highest reduction (98.1%). Treating the acid-etched dentine powder with any of the five simplified etch-and-rinse adhesives resulted in the reactivation of the proteolytic activity, with a significant negative linear correlation (P < 0.05) between the increases in fluorescence and the corresponding pH values of the adhesives. It is concluded that simplified etch-and-rinse adhesives can reactivate endogenous enzymatic activities in dentine that are previously inactivated by phosphoric acid-etching. The amount of enzyme reactivated may even exceed the original quantity present in untreated mineralised dentine. This provides an explanation for the degradation of hybrid layers after acid-etched dentine matrices are infiltrated with these adhesives. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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