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Writer's pictureDr. Evgeny Weinberg

A novel computationally engineered collagenase reduces the force required for tooth extraction in an ex-situ porcine jaw model

The currently employed tooth extraction methods in dentistry involve mechanical disruption of the periodontal ligament fibers, leading to inevitable trauma to the bundle bone comprising the socket walls. In our previous work, we have shown that a recombinantly expressed truncated version of clostridial collagenase G (ColG) purified from Escherichia coli efficiently reduced the force needed for tooth extraction in an ex-situ porcine jaw model, when injected into the periodontal ligament. Considering that enhanced thermostability often leads to higher enzymatic activity and to set the basis for additional rounds of optimization, we used a computational protein design approach to generate an enzyme to be more thermostable while conserving the key catalytic residues. This process generated a novel collagenase (ColG-variant) harboring sixteen mutations compared to ColG, with a nearly 4℃ increase in melting temperature. Herein, we explored the potential of ColG-variant to further decrease the physical effort required for tooth delivery using our established ex-situ porcine jaw model. An average reduction of 11% was recorded in the force applied to extract roots of mandibular split first and second premolar teeth treated with ColG-variant, relative to those treated with ColG. Our results show for the first time the potential of engineering enzyme properties for dental medicine and further contribute to minimally invasive tooth extraction.

Original language

English

Article number

47

Journal

Volume

17

Issue Number

1

State

Published – Dec 2023

Funding

Funders

Funder Number

Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University


Keywords

  • Collagen

  • Collagenase

  • Minimally invasive medicine

  • Protein engineering

  • Tooth extraction

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