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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(37): 25614-25624, 2024 Sep 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39228133

RESUMEN

The formation of crystalline calcium phosphate (CaP) has recently gained ample attention as it does not follow the classic nucleation-and-growth mechanism of solid formation. Instead, the precipitation mechanisms can involve numerous intermediates, including soluble prenucleation species. However, structural features, stability, and transformation of such solution-state precursors remain largely undisclosed. Herein, we report a detailed and comprehensive characterization of the sequential events involved in calcium phosphate crystallization starting from the very early prenucleation stage. We integrated an extensive set of time-resolved methods, including NMR, turbidimetry, SAXS, cryo-TEM, and calcium-potentiometry to show that CaP nucleation is initiated by the transformation of "branched" polymeric prenucleation assemblies into amorphous calcium phosphate spheres. Such a mineralization process starts with the spontaneous formation of so-called nanometric prenucleation clusters (PNCs) that later assemble into those branched polymeric assemblies without calcium ion uptake from the solution. Importantly, the branched macromolecular species are invisible to many techniques (NMR, turbidity, calcium-potentiometry) but can readily be evidenced by time-resolved SAXS. We find that these polymeric assemblies constitute the origin of amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) precipitation through an unexpected process: spontaneous dissolution is followed by local densification of 100-200 nm wide domains leading to ACP spheres of similar size. Finally, we demonstrate that the timing of the successive events involved in the CaP mineralization pathway can be kinetically controlled by the Ca2+/Pi molar ratio, such that the lifetime of the soluble transient species can be increased up to hours when decreasing it.

2.
Life (Basel) ; 13(12)2023 Nov 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38137847

RESUMEN

In this study, in operandi SAXS experiments were conducted on samples of human hair with a varying degree of strain (2% within the elastic region and 10% beyond). Four different features in the SAXS patterns were evaluated: The intermediate filament distance perpendicular to and the distance from the meridional arc in the load direction, as well as the distances of the lipid bilayer peak in and perpendicular to the load direction. From the literature, one concludes that polar lipids in the cuticle are the origin of the lipid peak in the SAXS pattern, and this study shows that the observed strain in the lipids is much lower than in the intermediate filaments. We support these findings with SEM micrographs, which show that the scales in the cuticle deform much less than the cortex. The observed deformation of the intermediate filaments is very high, about 70% of the macrostrain, and the ratio of the transverse strain to the longitudinal strain at the nanoscale gives a Poisson ratio of νnano = 0.44, which is typical for soft matter. This work also finds that by varying the time period between two strain cycles, the typical strain recovery time is about 1000 min, i.e., one day. After this period, the structure is nearly identical to the initial structure, which suggests an interpretation that this is the typical time for the self-healing of hair after mechanical treatment.

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