Scientist in lab applying innovative gel to regenerate tooth enamel, with before-and-after close-up, for news article on dentistry advancement.
AI 生成的图像

New gel regrows tooth enamel in lab tests, could transform dentistry

AI 生成的图像
事实核查

Scientists at the University of Nottingham have developed a fluoride‑free, protein‑based gel that regenerates enamel‑like layers on teeth in ex vivo tests by mimicking natural growth processes. The study was published on November 4, 2025, in Nature Communications.

What the study found

Researchers from the University of Nottingham’s School of Pharmacy and Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering report a bioinspired, protein‑based gel that restores eroded or demineralized enamel in laboratory tests on human teeth. The material is fluoride‑free and was designed to imitate the proteins that guide enamel formation, with results published on November 4, 2025, in Nature Communications.

How it works

According to the university’s release and the peer‑reviewed paper, the gel forms a thin, robust coating that penetrates the tooth surface, filling microscopic cracks and pores. It then acts as a scaffold that captures calcium and phosphate ions from saliva and directs them to grow new mineral in the same crystallographic orientation as native enamel (epitaxial mineralization). The regenerated layer integrates with the underlying tooth structure, restoring enamel’s architecture and mechanical performance in lab testing.

Potential uses and limits

The team reports the material can also be applied to exposed dentine, creating an enamel‑like coating that may help reduce sensitivity and, the university says, improve bonding for restorations. Because mature enamel does not naturally regrow, current options largely focus on prevention or temporary protection; the authors suggest this approach could offer a more durable repair if future clinical translation succeeds.

What they said

Lead author Dr. Abshar Hasan, a postdoctoral fellow, said: “Dental enamel has a unique structure, which gives enamel its remarkable properties that protect our teeth throughout life against physical, chemical, and thermal insults. When our material is applied to demineralized or eroded enamel, or exposed dentine, the material promotes the growth of crystals in an integrated and organized manner, recovering the architecture of our natural healthy enamel. We have tested the mechanical properties of these regenerated tissues under conditions simulating ‘real‑life situations’ such as tooth brushing, chewing, and exposure to acidic foods, and found that the regenerated enamel behaves just like healthy enamel.”

Professor Alvaro Mata, chair in biomedical engineering and biomaterials and the study’s lead investigator, said the technology “is safe, can be easily and rapidly applied, and it is scalable.” He added that the team has begun translation through its start‑up, Mintech‑Bio, and “hope to have a first product out by next year,” while emphasizing the platform’s versatility for patients with enamel loss or exposed dentine.

Why it matters

Enamel degradation contributes to tooth decay, a set of oral health problems that affect nearly half the global population. By recreating the structure and properties of healthy enamel in lab settings—and doing so without fluoride—the approach could broaden options for preventive and restorative care. Real‑world impact, however, will depend on successful product development and clinical adoption.

相关文章

Illustration of scientists in a lab studying a miniature human bone marrow model, depicting blood cell production for medical research.
AI 生成的图像

Researchers build functional miniature human bone marrow model

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像 事实核查

Scientists at the University of Basel report a three-dimensional human bone marrow model built entirely from human cells. The lab-grown system replicates the endosteal niche and sustains blood cell production for weeks, a step that could accelerate blood cancer research and reduce some animal testing.

A clinical study shows that arginine, a natural amino acid, can reduce acidity in dental biofilms and alter their structure to protect against cavities. Researchers at Aarhus University tested the treatment on participants with active tooth decay, finding promising results after four days. The findings suggest arginine could enhance cavity-prevention products like toothpaste.

由 AI 报道

Scientists from Brazil and Portugal have created a magnetic nanocomposite that targets bone cancer cells while promoting bone regeneration. The material uses heat from a magnetic field to destroy tumors and a bioactive coating to aid healing. This innovation could enable less invasive therapies for bone tumors.

Scientists at the University of Minnesota have shown that disrupting how oral bacteria communicate can shift dental plaque toward communities associated with better oral health, potentially opening the door to new ways of preventing gum disease without wiping out beneficial microbes.

由 AI 报道

Researchers at the National University of Singapore have discovered that calcium alpha-ketoglutarate, a naturally occurring molecule, can repair key memory processes disrupted by Alzheimer's disease. The compound improves communication between brain cells and restores early memory abilities that fade first in the condition. Since it already exists in the body and declines with age, boosting it could offer a safer approach to protecting brain health.

国际研究团队开发了一种“自刻蚀”技术,用于加工柔软且不稳定的离子晶格半导体,特别是二维钙钛矿薄层单晶,而不会损坏其结构,从而克服了光电材料领域的一个关键挑战。该研究由中国科学技术大学、普渡大学和上海科技大学的研究人员领导,于周四发表在《自然》杂志上。

由 AI 报道 事实核查

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory researchers report that engineered anti-uPAR CAR T cells cleared senescence-linked cells in mice, improving intestinal regeneration, reducing inflammation and strengthening gut barrier function. The approach also aided recovery from radiation-related intestinal injury and showed regenerative signals in experiments using human intestinal and colorectal cells, raising the possibility of future clinical trials.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝