| Literature DB >> 27747624 |
Martin Gosau1,2, Sandra Viale-Bouroncle1, Hannah Eickhoff1, Esthera Prateeptongkum1, Anja Reck1, W Götz3, Christoph Klingelhöffer1, Steffen Müller1, Christian Morsczeck4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dental stem cells in combination with implant materials may become an alternative to autologous bone transplants. For tissue engineering different types of soft and rigid implant materials are available, but little is known about the viability and the osteogenic differentiation of dental stem cells on these different types of materials. According to previous studies we proposed that rigid bone substitute materials are superior to soft materials for dental tissue engineering.Entities:
Keywords: Allograft product; Dental stem cells; Hydroxyapatite; Osteogenic differentiation; Silicone
Year: 2015 PMID: 27747624 PMCID: PMC5004001 DOI: 10.1186/s40729-014-0002-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Implant Dent ISSN: 2198-4034
Figure 1Cell attachment on tested materials. (A) Relative cell adherence of DFCs and dNC-PCs; (B) dental cells did little adhere on PA; representative pictures of DFCs.
Figure 2C ell proliferation of dNC-PCs and DFCs on tested materials. (A) and (B) Relative cell numbers; (C) spheroid cell clusters on silicone (representative pictures for DFCs); Silicone (24 and 48 h).
Figure 3Evaluation of programmed cell death (apoptosis) in dental stem cells. (A) Flow cytometry analyses (for details materials and methods) show percentage of vital cells (black number), apoptotic cells (blue number), and dead cells (red number). (B) Western blot analyses show the expression of the pro-apoptotic marker BAX and the anti-apoptotic marker BCL2.
Figure 4Osteogenic differentiation of dental stem cells. Normalized ALP activity of dNC-PCs and DFCs on AP and SB (A) and on silicone (B). Cells were differentiated on standard cell culture dishes for control.
Figure 5Evaluation of osteogenic differentiation. (A) Clustergram of PCR-array results; (B-C) histology of differentiated dental cells on AP (B) and SB (C). Representative results are shown for dNC-PCs.
Figure 6Cultivation and osteogenic differentiation of DFCs on PA after modification with collagen I. (Left) Relative cell number and (Right) normalized ALP activity.