Bones are bio-composites with biologically tunable mechanical properties,
where a polymer matrix of nanofibrillar collagen is reinforced by apatite
mineral crystals. Some bones, such as antler, form and change rapidly, while
other bone tissues, such as human tooth dentine, develop slowly and maintain
constant composition and architecture for entire lifetimes. When studying
apatite mineral microarchitecture, mineral distributions or mineralization
activity of bone-forming cells, representative samples of tissue are best
studied at submicrometre resolution while minimizing sample-preparation
damage. Here, we demonstrate the power of ptychographic X-ray tomography to
map variations in the mineral content distribution in three dimensions and at
the nanometre scale. Using this non-destructive method, we observe
nanostructures surrounding hollow tracts that exist in human dentine forming
dentinal tubules. We reveal unprecedented quantitative details of the
ultrastructure clearly revealing the spatially varying mineralization density.
Such information is essential for understanding a variety of natural and
therapeutic effects for example in bone tissue healing and ageing