Revolutionising research: DIAD delves into dentistry

The innovative design of Diamond’s Dual Imaging and Diffraction (DIAD) beamline provides valuable opportunities for biomedical materials science

Diamond is home to an ever-evolving array of beamlines and instruments, allowing scientists from a wide variety of disciplines to collect high-quality, high-resolution data for their groundbreaking research. In materials science, X-ray imaging and tomography experiments can determine the 3D microstructure of samples, while X-ray diffraction techniques offer the phase composition and stress distribution. Most synchrotron beamlines are designed to offer one or the other, with a few that can do both – but not at the same time. Switching between the modes can be complicated and time consuming. Diamond’s Dual Imaging and Diffraction beamline (DIAD) provides both imaging and diffraction capabilities in one instrument. Its novel dual beam design operates with two independent beams meeting at the sample position, one setup for imaging and one for diffraction. By constantly switching between the two modes, DIAD enables in situ and in operando measurements and time-resolved studies. Understanding the complex structure of tooth enamel, the factors involved in its decay and potential strategies for its remineralisation exemplify some outstanding tasks in biomedical materials science that can benefit from the dual beamline approach. In work recently published in Chemical & Biomedical Imaging, a group of researchers from the University of Oxford and the University of Birmingham (led by Professor Alexander Korsunsky) detail a proof-of-concept study that demonstrated how the unique capabilities of DIAD can be used to consider different options for remineralisation and to grade them in terms of how well they work.

Teeth: nature’s nanostructured marvels

Human teeth are a miracle of biological engineering. Their remarkable strength and resilience come from a combination of hard external enamel over an interior of flexible dentine. On the microscopic scale, enamel is built from nanoscale hydroxyapatite (HAp) crystallites, bundled together into micron-scale rods with surrounding inter-rod regions. Delving deeper into the extraordinary structure of teeth provides valuable insights for the development of strong, bio-inspired materials. However, as we’re all aware, teeth aren’t impervious, and can rot away under the onslaught of an acid-provoking modern diet. Unlike those of some other animals (such as rodents), human teeth don’t regenerate. Once they are damaged, we must face the pain of a “drill and fill” repair, or the fitting of synthetic prosthetic replacements. 

Project lead Prof Alexander Korsunsky, from the University of Oxford, said:

Teeth are a fascinating example of nature’s hierarchical structuring from the nanoscale. Whereas bone and dentine, the inner part of the tooth, remain vascularised and living – meaning constantly renewing, changing, rebuilding, remodelling – enamel is one part of the human body that doesn’t. Nature effectively builds pieces of stone subjected to extreme thermal, chemical and mechanical attack, that can last up to 100 years. In our first major research project we set out to understand the processes involved in dental caries and how they interact with the structure of teeth. Now that another major four-year project has been awarded, we are out to explore what could be done to reverse caries and remineralise enamel.

Read more on Diamond website

Synchrotrons are accelerating dental research to benefit global health

A team of scientists from the University of Oxford and the University of Birmingham have just published one of the most comprehensive multi-disciplinary reviews covering nearly 40 years of discoveries and advancements in the study of enamel and its demineralisation (caries).  The review reveals how synchrotron radiation facilities – such as Diamond Light Source – enabled unprecedented new insights into dental tissue function and degradation at different scales.

Caries remains a debilitating condition that lacks adequate prevention and treatment that demands further research to find innovative ways to overcome its detrimental impact on global health. The disease had a global prevalence of around 2.3 billion in 2017 (in permanent teeth). In addition to the clinical effects of pain and discomfort, aesthetic issues, and eventually tooth loss, it constitutes a huge economic burden, estimated to be billions of USD worldwide in painful disruptive treatments.

The team’s paper; Synchrotron X-ray Studies of the Structural and Functional Hierarchies in Mineralised Human Dental Enamel: A State-of-the-Art Review” was published in the Dentistry Journal 10th Anniversary Issue (April 2023). https://doi.org/10.3390/dj11040098.  Its strategic aim was to identify and evaluate prospective avenues for analysing dental tissues and developing treatments and prophylaxis for improved dental health.

Team leader, Professor Alexander Korsunsky, Professor and Fellow Emeritus at Trinity College, Oxford, explains:

Understanding the mechanism of caries development requires tracing the pathways of the biological, chemical, and structural processes that unfold progressively from the microbial and crystal level up to the macroscopic scale. This necessarily engenders the need to visualise and understand tissue organisation and function, along with its interaction with the microbial and chemical environment, through static and dynamic studies. Synchrotron-based studies offer unique tools for this purpose, due to the versatile interaction of X-ray photons with the organic and inorganic tissue components.

Hard dental tissues possess a complex hierarchical structure that is particularly evident in enamel, the most mineralised substance in the human body. Its complex and interlinked organisation at the Ångstrom (crystal lattice), nano-, micro-, and macro-scales is the result of evolutionary optimisation for mechanical and functional performance: hardness and stiffness, fracture toughness, thermal and chemical resistance.  Understanding the physical–chemical–structural relationships at each scale requires the application of appropriately sensitive and resolving probes.

Dr Cyril Besnard, the lead author, adds:

Currently, about 50 synchrotron facilities worldwide are contributing an outstanding amount of research work along with the continuous improvement of analytical approaches. This is due to the fact that synchrotron X-ray techniques offer the possibility to progress significantly beyond the capabilities of conventional laboratory instruments, i.e., X-ray diffractometers, and electron and atomic force microscopes. The last few decades have witnessed the accumulation of results obtained from X-ray scattering (diffraction), spectroscopy (including polarisation analysis), and imaging (including ptychography and tomography).

The first section of the review briefly covers the structure of the enamel (and dentine), describes dental caries disease and its causative factors, including the nature and organisation of biofilm and its effects on the enamel, and discusses the existing strategies for remineralisation. The second section provides an overview of synchrotron facilities, followed by a description of the application of synchrotron methods to dental tissue studies: diffraction (scattering), imaging (including tomography and ptychography), and spectroscopy.  

Dr Igor Dolbnya, senior beamline scientist on the B16 Test beamline at Diamond, comments:

The modern synchrotron, like the UK’s Diamond Light Source, offers the versatility of utilizing customised experimental setups, which can be categorised based on the type of detector and relevant setup; the energy in use, either soft or hard X-rays (in vacuum or air or liquid); the presence of magnetic fields or temperature control; and the type of monitoring process (static or dynamic analysis) and equipment. The continuous development of synchrotron facilities, techniques, and devices, means that the future will be bright for the research into mineralised tissues.

Read more on Diamond Light Source website

Image: Graphical abstract of the paper