Abstract

Odontoblast-lineage cells acquire heat-shock protein (HSP)-25-immunoreactivity (IR) after they complete their cell division, suggesting that this protein acts as a switch between cell proliferation and differentiation during tooth development. However, there are few available data concerning the relationship between cell proliferation and differentiation following cavity preparation. The present study aims to clarify the expression of HSP-25 in the odontoblast-lineage cells with their proliferative activity after cavity preparation by immunocytochemistry for HSP-25 and cell proliferation assay using 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling. In untreated control teeth, intense HSP-25-IR was found in odontoblasts and some subodontoblastic mesenchymal cells. Cavity preparation caused the destruction of odontoblasts and the disappearance of HSP-25-IR was conspicuous at the affected site, although some cells retained HSP-25-IR and subsequently most of them disappeared from the pulp-dentin border by postoperative day 1. Contrary, some subodontoblastic mesenchymal cells with weak HSP-25-IR began to take the place of degenerated cells, although no proliferative activity was recognizable in the dental pulp. Interestingly, proliferative cells in the dental pulp significantly increased in number on day 2 when the newly differentiating cells already arranged along the pulp-dentin border, and continued their proliferative activity in the wide range of the pulp tissue until day 5. These findings indicate that progenitor cells equipped in the subodontoblastic layer firstly migrate and differentiate into new odontoblast-like cells to compensate for the loss of the odontoblast layer, and subsequently the reorganization of dental pulp was completed by active proliferation of the mesenchymal cells occurring in a wide range of pulp tissue.

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