Site icon CLINICALNEWS.ORG

Can Keratin Regenerate Tooth Enamel? Ep 1256 AUG 2025

Narrator ralph turchiano source gamea et al., adv. healthcare mater. 2025
YouTube player

A recent study in Advanced Healthcare Materials reports a novel method for regenerating tooth enamel using water-based films made from keratin, a protein abundant in sources like wool. Researchers found that these keratin films can self-assemble into organized scaffolds that guide the growth of aligned apatite nanocrystals, mimicking natural enamel formation. When applied to artificially created early enamel lesions (white spot lesions), the keratin-based system was able to repair the damage, restoring both the tooth’s optical appearance and its mechanical properties. Notably, the mechanical recovery was significant; nanoindentation tests showed the elastic modulus of damaged enamel increased from ~5 GPa back to ~53 GPa, and hardness recovered from ~0.1 GPa to over 1.0 GPa after treatment. These findings present a promising, simple, and potentially low-cost strategy for the clinical treatment of early dental caries.
Disclaimers:

#Keratin #EnamelRegeneration #Biomineralization #DentalResearch #RegenerativeDentistry

S. Gamea, E. Radvar, D. Athanasiadou, et al. “ Biomimetic Mineralization of Keratin Scaffolds for Enamel Regeneration.” Adv. Healthcare Mater. (2025): e02465. https://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202502465

Keratin, enamel regeneration, biomimetic mineralization, apatite nanocrystals, hard tissue regeneration, dental caries, white spot lesion repair, protein scaffolds, self-assembly, spherulites, mechanical properties of enamel, nanoindentation, Knoop microhardness, tooth decay treatment, regenerative dentistry, biomaterials, apatite nucleation, hierarchical structure, dental tissue engineering, keratin films, in vitro study, restorative dentistry, dental biomimetics, biomineralization scaffolds, tooth repair

Exit mobile version