| Literature DB >> 33313519 |
Danial Babaki1, Sanam Yaghoubi2, Maryam M Matin3,4.
Abstract
The significance of dental materials in dentin-pulp complex tissue engineering is undeniable. The mechanical properties and bioactivity of mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) make it a promising biomaterial for future stem cell-based endodontic therapies. There are numerous in vitro studies suggesting the low cytotoxicity of MTA towards various types of cells. Moreover, it has been shown that MTA can enhance mesenchymal stem cells' (MSCs) osteo/odontogenic ability. According to the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA), a literature review was conducted in the Medline, PubMed, and Scopus databases. Among the identified records, the cytotoxicity and osteo/odontoblastic potential of MTA or its extract on stem cells were investigated. Previous studies have discovered the differentiation-inducing potential of MTA on MSCs, providing a background for dentin-pulp complex cell therapies using the MTA, however, animal trials are needed before moving into clinical trials. In conclusion, MTA can be a promising candidate dental biomaterial for futuristic stem cell-based endodontic therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Mesenchymal stem cells; mineral trioxide aggregate; osteo/odontogenic differentiation; regenerative medicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 33313519 PMCID: PMC7717865 DOI: 10.1080/26415275.2020.1848432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Investig Dent ISSN: 2641-5275
Figure 1.The selection process of the included literature.
Cytotoxicity of MTA towards MSCs.
| Cell Type | Source | Evaluation | Observation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMMSC | Human | DNA quantification assay, Enzyme assay | ProRoot MTA and MTA Plus had stimulatory effects on cell proliferation at different dilutions (1:2–1:20), established from 0.1 g/cm2/mL extraction medium after 21 days. However, MTA Fillapex showed high toxicity after 1,7, 14, and 21 days at different concentrations. | Costa et al. [ |
| BMMSC | Human | AlamarBlue assay | Viability of cells in direct contact with ProRoot MTA was similar to control group after 1, 3, 5, and 7 days of incubation. | D’Anto et al. [ |
| BMMSC | Human | MTT assay | No significant difference was observed between cell viability between bone marrow-derived MSCs, cultured in ProRoot MTA-conditioned medium, and control group after 24 h. | Ashraf et al. [ |
| BMMSC | Human | MTT assay | Results indicated that cells cocultured with ProRoot MTA and Micro-Mega MTA discs, placed in transwell inserts, had same viability ratio compared with control group on days 1, 3, and 7. Higher cell viability was seen in treated groups on day 14. | Margunato et al. [ |
| BMMSC | Rat | MTT assay | MTA was not toxic at different concentrations (0.002, 0.02, 0.2, and 2 mg/mL) after 3 and 5 days. | Wang et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTS assay | After 24, 48, and 120 h of incubation in ProRoot MTA conditioned medium, the viability of cells in control group was significantly higher. Moreover, using propylene glycol as mixing liquid did not affect the cytotoxicity of MTA. | Natu et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTT assay | DPSC viability in direct contact with ProRoot MTA after 1, 3, and 7 days was statistically lower than control group. It has been shown that on days 1 and 3 MTA, mixed with distilled water, represented lower toxicity in comparison to MTA that was mixed with 10% CaCl2, 5% CaCl2, and 2.5% Na2HPO4. | Kulan et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTT assay | Three dimensional DPSC culture, established in collagen type I scaffold, on ProRoot MTA showed similar cell viability compared with control group. | Widbiller et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTT assay, Enzyme assay, Flow cytometry | Results confirmed that after setting for 24 h, ProRoot MTA discs in transwell inserts were cytotoxic after 3 days. However, using cyclic aging protocol, re-immersing used-MTA discs in deionized water for 4 days in each cycle and placing them in transwell inserts of new culture vessels for 3 days, reduced the toxicity nature of MTA discs on day 3. | Niu et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | XTT assay, Flow cytometry | By using cyclic aging protocol, they concluded that within the 3rd and 4th cycles no difference was observed in MTA Angelus-treated and control groups in terms of cell viability. Furthermore, dilution factor affected the toxicity of the eluent released by the MTA Angelus. | Bortoluzzi et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTT assay | Conditioned medium of ProRoot MTA at concentrations of 10 and 20 mg/mL was cytotoxic after 1, 3, and 5 days. However, cell survival was increased after exposure to 0.1, 0.2, 1, and 2 mg/mL ProRoot MTA on day 5. | Zhao et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTT assay | Cytotoxicity of 4 types of MTA-conditioned media (ProRoot MTA, RMTA, Nanohybrid MTA, and MTA Angelus) was assessed. Although Nanohybrid MTA exhibited cytotoxicity at all time intervals, all the other three types showed proliferation stimulating potential. | Jaberiansari et al. [ |
| DPSC | Human | MTT assay | ProRoot MTA was allowed to set for two time periods, 1 h and 24 h. Cell viability evaluation showed that cytotoxicity in direct contact with MTA was lower in 24-hour group compared with 1-hour and control groups after 7 days. | Agrafioti et al. [ |
| DPSC | Rat inflammatory dental pulp | MTT assay, Flow cytometry | ProRoot MTA conditioned medium was made at concentrations of 0.002, 0.02, 0.2, 2, and 20 mg/mL. It was observed that 0.002–0.2 mg/mL MTA-conditioned media showed no cytotoxicity. Cell proliferation was down regulated at concentrations of 2 and 20 mg/mL after 5 days of incubation. | Wang et al. [ |
| SCAP | Human | XTT assay, Microscopic examination | ProRoot MTA discs were placed on the bottom surface of the culture vessel for evaluating the toxicity of MTA after 1, 3, and 7 days. It has been shown that after 1 day, cell viability in MTA group was higher than control group. However, no statistical difference was observed after 3 and 7 days. | Peters et al. [ |
| SCAP | Human | Coulter counter, Flow cytometry | 2 mg/mL ProRoot MTA conditioned medium was not toxic after 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 days. | Yan et al. [ |
| SCAP | Human | MTT assay | Cell coculturing was performed by placing 1 mg of ProRoot MTA in transwell inserts. 24-hour, 48-hour, and 168-hour results indicated that cell viability was not significantly different from control group. | Saberi et al. [ |
| SCAP | Human | WST-1 assay | 20 mg disc-shaped set ProRoot MTA, allowed to set for 1 or 24 h, was placed in transwell inserts. It was observed that cell proliferation increased in 1-hour and 24-hour groups on day 1 and days 1 and 5 compared with control group, respectively. No statistical difference was observed in term of cytotoxicity of MTA up to 14 days. | Schneider et al. [ |
| PDLSC | Human | MTT assay, Microscopic examination | Cytotoxicity and proliferation stimulating potential of various dilutions of MTA Fillapex eluent were determined after 24, 48 and 72 h of cultur. MTA Fillapex exhibited high cytotoxicity at all concentrations and time intervals compared to control group. | Rodriguez-Lozano et al. [ |
| PDLSC | Human | MTT assay, Microscopic examination, Flow cytometry | After exposing to different dilutions of Endoseal MTA eluate, produced according to the International Standard ISO 10993-5, for 24, 48 and 72 h, it was revealed that this material was toxic at all concentrations and time intervals compared to control group. | Collado-González et al. [ |
| SHED | Human | MTT assay, Flow cytometry | Cell proliferation was stimulated in presence of MTA Angelus eluate, produced according to the International Standard ISO 10993-5, after 2 and 3 days of incubation. | Collado-González et al. [ |
| DPSC, PDLSC, BMMSC | Human | MTT assay | Culturing cells in direct contact with ProRoot MTA after 1 day showed no effect on cell proliferation. After 5 days of incubation, cell proliferation was increased in all three cell types. | Chen et al. [ |
| TGSC | Human | MTS assay | Cell viability was similar in cells that were in direct contact with ProRoot MTA compared to cells in control group. | Guven et al. [ |
| C3H10T1/2 | Mouse | XTT assay | Different concentrations of ProRoot MTA conditioned media were produced. viability of cells was not significantly different from control group. | Lee et al. [ |
Cells; BMMSC: bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell, DPSC: dental pulp stem cell, SCAP: stem cell from the apical papilla, PDLSC: periodontal ligament stem cell, SHED: stem cell from exfoliated deciduous tooth, TGSC: tooth germ stem cell, C3H10T1/2: mouse mesenchymal stem cell.
Differentiation-inducing potential of MTA.
| Cell type | Source | Medium | MTA treatment | ALP activity | Mineralization | Evaluated genetic markers | Altered genetic marker(s)a | Altered protein marker(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMMSC | Human | αMEM + Ascorbic acid | MCM | + | + | N | N | N | Costa et al. [ |
| BMMSC | Human | DMEM | MCM | M | M | Neither | N | Ashraf et al. [ | |
| BMMSC | Human | OM | TI | + | + | M | Margunato et al. [ | ||
| BMMSC | Rat | DMEM | MCM | + | + | S | RUNX2, OSX, OCN, DSP | Wang et al. [ | |
| DPSC | Human | DMEM | MCM | N | – | S | N | Natu et al. [ | |
| DPSC | Human | αMEM + Ascorbic acid | DC (cells on collagen scaffold) | + | N | N | Widbiller et al. [ | ||
| DPSC | Human | OM | TI | – | – | N | Bortoluzzi et al. [ | ||
| DPSC | Human | αMEM | MCM | N | N | S | N | Zhao et al. [ | |
| DPSC | Human | DMEM | DC | N | + | TGF-β1, FGF4 | Asgary et al. [ | ||
| BMP4 | |||||||||
| DPSC | Human | OM | TI | + | + | S | OCN, DMP1, DSPP | Niu et al. [ | |
| DPSC | Human | OM | MCM | N | + | N | Hanafy et al. [ | ||
| DPSC | Human | OM | MCM | + | + | N | Maher et al. [ | ||
| DPSC | Rat inflammatory dental pulp | αMEM | MCM | + | + | S | RUNX2, OSX, OCN, DSP | Wang et al. [ | |
| SCAP | Human | αMEM | MCM | + | + | DSP, RUNX2, OCN | Yan et al. [ | ||
| SCAP | Human | αMEM | DC (cells were cultured on dentin discs, occluded with MTA) | N | + | N | Miller et al. [ | ||
| SCAP | Human | DMEM | MCM | + | + | S | N | Saberi et al. [ | |
| PDLSC | Human | αMEM | MCM | + | + | S | DSP, RUNX2, OCN, OSX, OPN, DMP1, ALP, COL1 | Wang et al. [ | |
| SHED | Human | DMEM | MCM | N | – | N | N | N | Collado-González et al. [ |
| SHED | Human | αMEM | MCM | N | N | S | N | Araújo et al. [ | |
| TGSC | Human | OM | DC | + | M | S | N | Guven et al. [ | |
| C3H10T1/2 | Mouse | OM | MCM | + | N | S | N | Lee et al. [ |
Proteins, and genes; COL1: Collagen type I, OCN: Osteocalcin, ON: Osteonectin, Runx2: Runt-related transcription factor 2, ALP: Alkaline phosphatase, OSX: Transcription factor SP7 also called Osterix, DSPP: Dentin sialophosphoprotein, DSP: Dentin sialoprotein, MEPE: Matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein, DMP: Dentin matrix acidic phosphoprotein, FGF: fibroblast growth factor, BMP: bone morphogenetic protein, TGF-β: transforming growth factor β, IBSP: integrin binding sialoprotein. Cells; BMMSC: bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell, DPSC: dental pulp stem cell, SCAP: stem cell from the apical papilla, SHED: stem cell from exfoliated deciduous tooth, TGSC: tooth germ stem cell, C3H10T1/2: mouse mesenchymal stem cell model. Media; DMEM: Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium, αMEM: alpha modified Eagle’s medium, OM: Osteo/odontogenic medium. MTA treatment; MCM: MTA-conditioned medium, TI: transwell insert containing MTA discs, DC: Direct contact with MTA. Assays; (+): significant increase compared to control group, (-): significant decrease compared to control group, M: no significant change has been seen, S: same as elevated gene/protein markers, N: not evaluated.
regular cells represent upregulation of gene/protein marker expression, shaded cells represent gene/protein marker downregulation
Figure 2.Involvement of major signaling pathways in osteo/odontogenesis effects of MTA on MSCs. IKK: IκB kinase, IκBα masks the nuclear localization signal (NLS) of NF-κB and inhibits its function, AP-1: Activator protein 1, question mark (?) means that the mechanism of action is unknown.