Abstract

Investigations of the odontoblast phenotype are hindered by obstacles such as the limited number of odontoblasts within the dental pulp and the difficulty in purification of these cells. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a cell culture system in which the local environment is inductive and can promote dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) to differentiate into odontoblast lineage. In this study, we investigated the effect of conditioned medium from developing tooth germ cells (TGCs) on the differentiation and dentinogenesis of DPSCs both in vitro and in vivo. DPSCs were enzymatically isolated from the lower incisors of 4-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats and co-cultured with TGC conditioned medium (TGC-CM). The cell phenotype of induced DPSCs presents many features of odontoblasts, as assessed by the morphologic appearance, cell cycle modification, increased alkaline phosphatase level, synthesis of dentin sialoprotein, type I collagen and several other noncollagenous proteins, expression of the dentin sialophosphoprotein and dentin matrix protein 1 genes, and the formation of mineralized nodules in vitro. The induced DPSC pellets in vivo generated a regular-shaped dentin-pulp complex containing distinct dentinal tubules and predentin, while untreated pellets spontaneously differentiated into bone-like tissues. To our knowledge, this is the first study to mimic the dentinogenic microenvironment from TGCs in vitro, and our data suggest that TGC-CM creates the most odontogenic microenvironment, a feature essential and effective for the regular dentinogenesis mediated by DPSCs.

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