| Literature DB >> 32033375 |
Dishant Shah1, Tyler Lynd1, Donald Ho1, Jun Chen1, Jeremy Vines1, Hwi-Dong Jung2, Ji-Hun Kim3, Ping Zhang4, Hui Wu4, Ho-Wook Jun1, Kyounga Cheon4.
Abstract
Dental pulp tissue exposed to mechanical trauma or cariogenic process results in root canal and/or periapical infections, and conventionally treated with root canal procedures. The more recent regenerative endodontic procedure intends to achieve effective root canal disinfection and adequate pulp-dentin tissue regeneration; however, numerous limitations are reported. Because tooth is composed of vital soft pulp enclosed by the mineralized hard tissue in a highly organized structure, complete pulp-dentin tissue regeneration has been challenging to achieve. In consideration of the limitations and unique dental anatomy, it is important to understand the healing and repair processes through inflammatory-proliferative-remodeling phase transformations of pulp-dentin tissue. Upon cause by infectious and mechanical stimuli, the innate defense mechanism is initiated by resident pulp cells including immune cells through chemical signaling. After the expansion of infection and damage to resident pulp-dentin cells, consequent chemical signaling induces pluripotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to migrate to the injury site to perform the tissue regeneration process. Additionally, innovative biomaterials are necessary to facilitate the immune response and pulp-dentin tissue regeneration roles of MSCs. This review highlights current approaches of pulp-dentin tissue healing process and suggests potential biomedical perspective of the pulp-dentin tissue regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Biomaterials; Chemical Signaling; Immune Cells; Inflammatory Response; Mesenchymal Stem Cells; Nitric Oxide; Pulp–Dentin Tissue; Tissue Regeneration
Year: 2020 PMID: 32033375 PMCID: PMC7074340 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9020434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Cellular response at pulp–dentin interface: (A) Healthy immature tooth. (B) Infected tooth.
Figure 2Multifunctional effects of nitric oxide for potential tissue regeneration.
Summary of recent biomedical approaches in regenerative endodontics (adapted from work in [21,112]).
| Stem Cells | Scaffold | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pulp fibroblasts | PGA, collagen I, alginate | Pulp-like tissue after 45 to 60 days on PGA | [ |
| Human DPSCs | Col Type I with CP and DMP-1 | New pulp-like tissue formation and organization | [ |
| Collagens I and III, chitosan, gelatin | Adhesion and proliferation | [ | |
| NF-PCL/gelatin/nHA | DPSC differentiation toward an odontoblast-like cells in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| NF-PLLA | Attachment, proliferation, and differentiation of human DPSCs | [ | |
| Self-assembling MDP | Pulp-like tissue formation | [ | |
| DDM-PLGA/Co-Cs-HA | Potential as attractive scaffolds for odontogenic differentiation | [ | |
| 3D Col/HA/PLCL | DPSC Differentiation and proliferation | [ | |
| Self-assembling peptide (PuramatrixTM) | DPSC survival, proliferation, and differentiation | [ | |
| Porous chitosan/Col | Release of BMP-7 gene; DPSC differentiation into odontoblast-like cells in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Dog mobilized DPSCs | Col with G-CSF | Ectopic model, pulp-like tissue regeneration | [ |
| Complete pulp-like and dentin-like tissue regeneration | [ | ||
| Orthotopic model; Less volume of regenerated pulp-like tissue in aged dogs compared with that in young dogs | [ | ||
| SHED | PLLA | Pulp-like tissue formation | [ |
| 3dimension dense Col | Odontogenic cell differentiation and mineralization | [ | |
| Peptide(PuramatrixTM) with rhCol type I | SHED injected into full-length human root canals differentiate into functional odontoblasts | [ | |
| DPSCs & SHED | HA/TCP | Generation of dentin or bone (SHED) and dentin-pulp-like complexes (DPSC) | [ |
| PA self-assembling NF | Easy to handle; introduced into small defects; cell proliferation | [ | |
| DPSCs & SCAPs | Poly-D,L-lactide/glycolide | Pulp-like tissue formation with vascularity and dentin-like structure | [ |
| DPSCs, SCAPs, PDLSCs, and BMSSCs | PEGylated fibrin gel | All types of dental stem cells proliferated; excellent biocompatibility; insertion into small defects | [ |
| No Stem Cells | Alginate with TGF-β1 | Release of TGF-β1; odontoblast-like cell differentiation | [ |
| Gelatin incorporation of FGF-2 | Release of FGF-2; Induces the invasion of dental pulp cells and vessels | [ | |
| NF-PLGA/PLLA scaffolds with DOXY | Release of DOXY; inhibition of bacterial growth for a prolonged duration | [ | |
| GF–laden peptide with VEGF, TGFβ-1, and FGF-2 | Release of VEGF, TGF-β1, and FGF2; odontoblast-like cell differentiation; pulp-like tissue formation | [ | |
| NF PDS II-with MET and CIP | Release MET or CIP; antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| NF PDS II-HNTs | Potential in the development of a bioactive scaffold for regenerative endodontics | [ |
PGA: poly glycolic acid; DPSCs: dental pulp stem cells; Col: collagen; CP: ceramic powder; DMP-1: dentin matrix protein 1; NF: nanofibrous; PCL: poly ε-caprolactone; nHA: nano-hydroxyapatite; PLLA: Poly L-lactic acid; MDP: multidomain peptides; DDM: demineralized dentin matrix; PLGA: poly lactic-co-glycolic acid; Co–CS–HA: collagen–chondroitin sulfate–hyaluronic acid; PLCL: poly L-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone; BMP-7: human bone morphogenetic protein-7; G-CSF: granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; SHEDs: stem cells from human exfoliated deciduous teeth; rhCol: recombinant human collagen; TCP: tricalcium phosphate; PA: peptide-amphiphile; SCAPs: stem cells from root apical papilla; PDLSCs: periodontal ligament stem cells; BMSSCs: bone marrow stromal stem cells; PEG: polyethylene glycol; TGF-β1: transforming growth factor β family; FGF-2: fibroblast growth factor–2; DOXY: doxycycline; GF: growth factor; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; PDS-II: nanocomposite scaffold composed of polydioxanone; MET: metronidazole; CIP: Ciprofloxacin; Ef: Enterococcus faecalis; Pg: Porphyromonas gingivalis; HNT: halloysite nanotubes. (The inserted table highlighted the current finding of recent biomedical approaches in regenerative endodontics that was adapted from the two references with the permitted citations and adaptation from the publisher (Sage Publication). I read that the policy about the table adaptation would not need mention the copyright permission).