Abstract

The success rate of oral implants is lower in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients than in nondiabetic subjects; functional impairment of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) is an important underlying cause. Many factors in the blood can act on BMSCs to regulate their biological functions and influence implant osseointegration, but which factors play important negative roles in T2DM patients is still unclear. This study is aimed at screening differentially expressed genes in the blood from T2DM and nondiabetic patients, identifying which genes impact the osteogenic differentiation potential of alveolar BMSCs in T2DM patients, exploring drug intervention regimens, and providing a basis for improving implant osseointegration. Thus, a whole-blood gene expression microarray dataset (GSE26168) of T2DM patients and nondiabetic controls was analyzed. Based on Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) results, differentially expressed genes and signaling pathways related to BMSC osteogenic differentiation were screened, and major risk genes were extracted based on the mean decrease Gini coefficient calculated using the random forest method. Bone morphogenetic protein-4 (BMP-4), with significantly low expression in T2DM blood, was identified as the most significant factor affecting BMSC osteogenic differentiation potential. Subsequently, metformin, a first-line clinical drug for T2DM treatment, was found to improve the osteogenic differentiation potential of BMSCs from T2DM patients via the BMP-4/Smad/Runx2 signaling pathway. These results demonstrate that low BMP-4 expression in the blood of T2DM patients significantly hinders the osteogenic function of BMSCs and that metformin is effective in counteracting the negative impact of BMP-4 deficiency.

Highlights

  • With the continuous development of oral implantology, implant restoration has become the preferred treatment option for patients with dentition defects [1]

  • The results showed that recombinant human BMP-4 protein (rhBMP-4) increased the phosphorylation level of Smad1/5/8 and further promoted Runx2 expression, and the Smad inhibitor LDN-193189 significantly inhibited the above functions of rhBMP-4 (Figure 5(c))

  • In this study, according to the comprehensive analysis of Gene Ontology (GO) annotation and random forest (RF) results, we found that the difference in the bone morphogenetic protein-4 (BMP-4) expression level in the blood of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients and nondiabetic controls may be a major risk factor for the difference in Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) osteogenic differentiation between these two groups

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Summary

Introduction

With the continuous development of oral implantology, implant restoration has become the preferred treatment option for patients with dentition defects [1]. Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) has long been considered a relative contraindication for oral implant surgery [2, 3]. The risk of implant osseointegration failure in diabetic patients has decreased as implant surface treatment techniques improved [4], the healing-stage success rate and long-term survival rate of implants in diabetic patients are still significantly lower than those in nondiabetic patients [5]. Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) in jawbone marrow are adult stem cells that play important roles in implant osseointegration [6]. When an implant is placed into the jawbone, BMSCs begin to assemble around

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