1. Introduction
Oral diseases, including dental caries and periodontitis, are considered as a global health problem that occurs in both industrialized and developing countries. It is estimated that 3.5 billion people worldwide have experienced oral diseases, among which 2.3 billion people suffered from caries of permanent teeth and 530 million children suffered from caries of primary teeth [
1]. Dental caries not only inflict pain, discomfort, and disfigurement, but are also regarded as the main reason for dental restoration failure [
1,
2].
Dental composite restorative materials that are based on dimethacrylate resins are widely used as substitutes for tooth tissues. This arises from their mechanical and esthetical properties, which are superior when compared with the same properties of other dental materials such as amalgam or glass-ionomer cements [
3]. However, in comparison to them, antibacterial properties of dimethacrylate based composites are almost imperceptible. The amount of bacteria that accumulate on their surfaces is also higher if compared to the amount of bacteria that accumulate on the teeth surfaces [
2]. The phenomenon of bacteria accumulation on the surfaces of dimethacrylate-based composite materials is closely related to the polymerization shrinkage, which ranges from 2% to 5%. It results from the transformation of the van der Waals forces, which exist between the monomer molecules, into the covalent bonds, which exist within the dimethacrylate polymer network. This transformation is responsible for tighter packing of dimethacrylate structural units. As the polymerizing system shrinks, the marginal gaps are formed and, in extreme cases, the restoration cracks. Bacteria that exist in the oral environment are able to gather in the resulting marginal gaps and cracks, and as a result of their carbohydrates metabolism, secondary caries are formed [
2,
3].
The current trend in dental composite materials, which arises from the previously described drawbacks, is to develop composites that have antibacterial activity. The physical admixing of various organic and inorganic antibacterial agents is the simplest way to achieve this aim. Therefore, it is the most common method of achieving dental composites with antibacterial activity [
2,
4]. However, these compounds are not able to copolymerize with dimethacrylate resins, and thus they have a tendency to leach. Additionally, they cause a decrease in the degree of curing, which negatively affects the mechanical and physico-chemical properties of the composite. Recently, there is observed a growing interest in methacrylate monomers that contain positively charged quaternary ammonium nitrogen.
Antibacterial activity of quaternary ammonium compounds is based on the disruption of bacteria electrical balance. Due to the presence of the positively charged quaternary ammonium nitrogen, they can adsorb on the surface of a negatively charged bacteria cell wall, which results in the disintegration of the cell wall electrical balance. Ions, such as calcium (Ca
2+) and potassium (K
+), and other constituents of cytoplasmic membrane, which are essential to provide proper functioning of the bacteria, are released from bacteria cell leading to its death [
5].
Therefore, modern dentistry is interested in the development of new methacrylate monomers that possess the quaternary ammonium nitrogen. They are featured due to their ability to copolymerize with other dimethacrylates, constituting matrices of dental composites. They are merely a few examples of dimethacrylate monomers equipped with quaternary ammonium group described in the literature. Liang et al. synthesized new urethane-dimethacrylate monomer containing one quaternary ammonium group [
6]. However, the mechanical properties of composites modified with that monomer were inappropriate, while considering application as dental materials. Thus, the aim of this study was to design the structure and synthesis procedure of novel urethane-dimethacrylate monomer containing two quaternary ammonium and two methacrylate groups (
Figure 1) that could be applied in dental materials as an antibacterial agent, without detrimental impact on the materials’ physico-chemical and mechanical properties.
3. Results
QHAMA-C16-TMDI is the novel urethane-dimethacrylate monomer containing two quaternary ammonium groups, which was successfully synthesized in a three steps route (
Figure 1). First, the transesterification reaction of MMA with MDEA was performed. It resulted in formation of the intermediate product HAMA, which was a tertiary amine with one methacrylate group. Then, HAMA was reacted with 1-bromohexadecane in order to transform the tertiary amine group into the quaternary ammonium group via the Menschutkin reaction. Finally, the urethane-dimethacrylate QHAMA-C16-TMDI was synthesized via the addition reaction of the hydroxyl group of QHAMA-C16 (obtained in the previous step) and the TMDI isocyanate groups.
Chemical structure of intermediate and final products have been confirmed by 1H NMR, 13C NMR, and ATR-FT IR analysis.
The following signals were observed on the NMR and ATR-FT IR spectra of HAMA:
1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 1,95 (s, 3H, CH3-C=), 2.40 (s, 3H, CH3-N<), 2.60–2.90 (2m, 4H, -CH2-N<), 3.45 (m, 1H, -OH), 3.55–4.40 (2m, -CH2-O-), 5.60 i 6.20 (2m, 2H, CH2=C-) ppm.
13C NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 18 (CH3-C=), 42 (CH3-N<), 55–62 ppm (-CH2-N<, -CH2-O-), 125 (CH2=), 138 (>C=), 166 (C=O) ppm.
ATR-FT IR: 3200–3500 (-OH), 3105 (CH2=), 2930 (-CH2-, CH3-), 1716 (C=0), 1638 (C=C) cm−1.
The following signals were observed on the NMR and ATR-FT IR spectra of QHAMA-C16:
1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 0.90 (t, 3H, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 1.35 (m, 26H, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 1.70 (m, 2H, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+) 1.95 (s, 3H, CH3-C=), 3.45 (s, 3H, CH3-N+) 3.60 (m, 2H, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 3.75–4.10 (2m, 4H, -CH2-N+), 4.20 (s, 1H, -OH), 4.25–4.70 (2m, 4H, -CH2-O-), 5.60 i 6.10 (2m, 2H, CH2=C-) ppm.
13C NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 14 (CH3-(CH2)14-CH2-N+), 18 (CH3-C=), 22–32 (CH3-(CH2)14-CH2-N+), 50 (CH3-N+), 55–64 ppm (-CH2-N+, -CH2-O, CH3-(CH2)14-CH2-N+), 127 (CH2=), 135 (>C=), 166 (C=O) ppm.
ATR-FT IR: 3200–3500 (-OH), 3106 (CH2=), 2935 (-CH2-, CH3-), 1716 (C=0), 1636 (C=C) cm−1.
The following signals were observed on the NMR and ATR-FT IR spectra of QHAMA-C16-TMDI:
1H NMR (600 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 0.80–1.00 (m, 15H, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+, -NH-CH2-C(CH3)2-CH2-CH(CH3)-CH2-CH2-NH-), 1.25–1.35 (m, 52, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 1.60–1.85 (m, 9H, -NH-CH2-C(CH3)2-CH2-CH(CH3)-CH2-CH2-NH-, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 1.95 (s, 6H, CH3-C=), 2.70–3.20 (m, 4H, -NH-CH2-), 3.51 (s, 6H, CH3-N+), 3.55–3.70 (m, 4H, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 3.90–4.30 (2m, 8H, -CH2-N+), 4.50–4.80 (2m, 8H, -CH2-O-), 5.60 i 6.10 (2m, 4H, CH2=), 6.30–7.15 (m, 2H, -NH-C=O) ppm.
13C NMR (600 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 14 (CH3-(CH2)14-CH2-N+), 18–32 (CH3-C=, CH3-(CH2)14-CH2-N+, -NH-CH2-C(CH3)2-CH2-CH(CH3)-CH2-CH2-NH-), 36–48 (-NH-CH2-C(CH3)2-CH2-CH(CH3)-CH2-CH2-NH-), 50 (CH3-N+), 56–63 (-CH2-N+, -CH2-O-, CH3-(CH2)13-CH2-CH2-N+), 127 (CH2=), 134 (=C<), 155 (-NH-C=O), 166 (-COO-) ppm.
ATR-FT IR: 3221 (-NH-), 3105 (CH2=), 2923 (-CH2-, CH3-), 1716 (C=O), 1639 (C=C), 1536 (-NH-) cm−1.
4. Discussion
In this work we developed the synthesis route of a new aliphatic urethane–dimethacrylate monomer that contains two methacrylate, two urethane, and two quaternary ammonium groups. The methacrylate groups provide the possibility of copolymerization with other dimethacrylate resins. The latter include common dental monomers, such as Bis-GMA (bisphenol A diglycidyl ether), UDMA (commonly called the urethane-dimethacrylate monomer) and TEGDMA (triethylene glycol dimethacrylate). Fully aliphatic structure of the novel monomer and the presence of urethane groups shall ensure high elasticity of its molecule, which should promote curing efficiency, mechanical strength, and impact resistance [
7,
8]. Finally, the presence of quaternary ammonium groups should provide the antibacterial activity.
The new monomer was successfully synthesized in a three steps process. First, HAMA—the monomethacrylate ended with hydroxyl functionality—was achieved via the transesterification reaction of MMA with MDEA, used in the deficiency. Then, HAMA was subjected to quaternization via the Menschutkin reaction (otherwise, N-alkylation reaction). For this purpose we used 1-bromohexadecane. We decided to use alkyl bromide with sixteen carbon atoms, because several studies reported [
6,
9] that quaternary ammonium compounds containing a sixteen carbon atoms side alkyl chain attached to the quaternary nitrogen results in the highest antibacterial activity, in comparison to the quaternary ammonium compounds containing N-alkyl chain with higher or lower number of carbon atoms. This is mainly associated with the interactions between the quaternary ammonium compound and the lipids that build up the bacteria cytoplasmic membrane. It was reported that the length of hydrocarbon chains that create those lipids is about 16 carbon atoms [
10]. Thus, the quaternary ammonium monomers containing a side alkyl chain of similar length can interact with the bacteria lipids more efficiently than compounds containing an alkyl side chain of shorter or longer lengths. The final stage, which involved the synthesis of urethane-dimethacrylate, was conducted with the use of QHAMA-C16 and TMDI. TMDI has been chosen as a diisocyanate due to its industrial application in the synthesis of the UDMA resin that is currently used as a matrix component of common composite dental restorative materials, due to its good physico-chemical and mechanical properties [
11].
The chemical structure of the newly designed monomer should benefit in several aspects. QHAMA-C16-TMDI can be recognized as full-featured comonomer in the composite matrix curing process. The presence of two methacrylate groups ensures the possibility of the monomer incorporation into the polymer network with both ends. On the contrary, quaternary ammonium monomers with one methacrylate group can be incorporated into the polymer network with only one end. It means that the monomer body works as a pendant chain, causing a plasticizing effect. In the consequence, the polymer network loses its tightness, which reflects in its mechanical weakening [
7]. Therefore, monomethacrylates can be used in small amounts. Huang et al. [
12] confirmed this effect and revealed that the chemical modification of the dimethacrylate matrix with quaternary ammonium monomethacrylate negatively affects mechanical properties of the composite. Additionally, it is worth noting that dimethacrylate monomers have a lower tendency to leaching than monomethacrylate monomers. It can be deduced then that the composite based solely on dimethacrylates will have lower cytotoxicity than that containing a certain amount of monomethacrylate [
7]. The second asset of our new monomer stems from the presence of two quaternary ammonium groups. It was reported that the antibacterial activity of polycationic compounds is related to the amount of quaternized nitrogen atoms in their structures [
13]. In comparison to the monomers that contain one quaternary ammonium group, lower amount of the QHAMA-C16-TMDI might be sufficient to achieve comparable antibacterial activity. It can be substantial in accordance to the composite’s physico-chemical and mechanical characteristics, because lower amounts of currently used dimethacrylate based resins will have to be replaced by the quaternary ammonium monomer. Our predictions derive from the study of Liang et al. [
6] in which they reported that the addition of monomers with quaternary ammonium groups significantly increased composite water sorption and solubility.