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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter March 7, 2015

Thermodynamic basis for evolution of apatite in calcified tissues

  • Sabrina Rollin-Martinet , Alexandra Navrotsky , Eric Champion , David Grossin and Christophe Drouet EMAIL logo
From the journal American Mineralogist

Abstract

Bone remodeling and tooth enamel maturation are biological processes that alter the physicochemical features of biominerals with time. However, although the ubiquity of bone remodeling is clear, why is well-crystallized bone mineral systematically replaced by immature nanocrystalline inorganic material? In enamel, a clear evolution is also seen from the first mineral formed during the secretory stage and its mature well-crystalline form, which then changes little in the adult tooth. This contribution provides the thermodynamic basis underlying these biological phenomena. We determined, for the first time, the energetics of biomimetic apatites corresponding to an increasing degree of maturation. Our data point out the progressive evolution of the enthalpy (ΔHf°) and free energy (ΔGf°) of formation toward more negative values upon maturation. Entropy contributions to ΔGf ° values remained small compared to enthalpy contributions. ΔHf° varied from -12 058.9 ± 12.2 to -12 771.0 ± 21.4 kJ/mol for maturation times increasing from 20 min to 3 weeks, approaching the value for stoichiometric hydroxyapatite, -13 431.0 ± 22.7 kJ/mol. Apatite thermodynamic stability increased as its composition moved toward stoichiometry. These findings imply diminishing aqueous solubility of calcium and phosphate ions as well as decreased surface reactivity. Such thermodynamically driven maturation is favorable for enamel maturation since this biomineral is intended to resist external aggressions such as contact with acids. In contrast, maintaining a metastable highly reactive and soluble form of apatite is essential to the effective participation of bone as a source of calcium and phosphate for homeostasis. Therefore our data strongly suggest that, far from being trivial, the intrinsic thermodynamic properties of apatite mineral represent a critical driving force for continuous bone remodeling, in contrast to current views favoring a purely biologically driven cycle. These thermodynamic data may prove helpful in other domains relating, for example, to apatite-based biomaterials development or in the field of (geo)microbiology.

Received: 2013-3-14
Accepted: 2013-7-7
Published Online: 2015-3-7
Published in Print: 2013-11-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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