| Literature DB >> 34147130 |
Zixia Li1, Liu Liu1, Liu Wang1, Dongzhe Song2.
Abstract
The dentin-pulp complex is essential for the long-term integrity and viability of teeth but it is susceptible to damage caused by external factors. Because traditional approaches for preserving the dentin-pulp complex have various limitations, there is a need for novel methods for dentin-pulp complex reconstruction. The development of stem cell-based tissue engineering has given rise to the possibility of combining dental stem cells with a tissue-reparative microenvironment to promote dentin-pulp complex regeneration. Concentrated growth factor, a platelet concentrate, is a promising scaffold for the treatment of dentin-pulp complex disorders. Given its characteristics of autogenesis, convenience, usability, and biodegradability, concentrated growth factor has gained popularity in medical and dental fields for repairing bone defects and promoting soft-tissue healing. Numerous in vitro studies have demonstrated that concentrated growth factor can promote the proliferation and migration of dental stem cells. Here, we review the current state of knowledge on the effects of concentrated growth factor on stem cells and its potential applications in dentin-pulp complex regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Concentrated growth factor; Dentin–pulp complex; Regenerative endodontic treatment; Stem cell
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34147130 PMCID: PMC8214771 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-021-02446-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1The histological and morphological observation of the CGF. a The blood samples after centrifugation yield a three-layer product consisting of the upper plaletet poor plasma(PPP) and lower red blood cell (RBC) layers with concentrated growth factor (CGF) gel in the middle. b The concentrated growth factor (CGF) gel is divided into 3 parts: the upper white part (WP) and lower red portions (RP) with the buffy coat (BC) in the middle. c The ultrastructure of the CGF (scanning electron microscopy observation): numerous cellular components including platelets, red blood cells leucocytes, and CD34-positive cells are embedded in the three-dimensional network
Main bioactive growth factors released by activated platelets in CGF and their potential functions on SCs
| Name | General function | Potential functions on SCs |
|---|---|---|
| Transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 | A chemotactic and mitogenic factor | It promotes MSCs proliferation and ECM synthesis. It also is effective in the odontoblastic differentiation of MSCs [ |
| Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-BB | A chemotactic and mitogenic factor | It promotes the homing of MSCs. It stimulates MSCs, resulting in enhanced angiogenesis and osteogenesis with a dose-dependent effect [ |
| Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1 | Regulating the proliferation, migration, and differentiation of multiple cell types | It promotes osteogenic proliferation and differentiation of DPSCs and SCAPs and promotes alkaline phosphatase production [ |
| Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) | A key regulator of endothelial cell proliferation and migration in angiogenesis | It improves the proangiogenic capability of DPSCs and PDLSCs through accelerating the differentiation of SCs into endothelial cells. |
| Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) | A family of secreted multifunctional proteins involved in bone formation and development | It promotes osteogenic/odontogenic differentiation of SCs from different dental tissue sources. It also shows potential in inducing new bone formation and promoting the terminal differentiation of odontoblasts. |
| Epidermal growth factor (EGF) | A 53-amino acid peptide with roles in cell differentiation, migration, and apoptosis | It stimulates the osteogenic potential of DPSCs [ |
| Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) | A single-chain protein with mitogenic and angiogenic activities | It, as an effective homing/migration factor, promotes the migration of DPSCs. It also inhibits mineralisation and promotes neuronal differentiation of DPSCs [ |
Abbreviations: SCs stem cells, DPSCs dental pulp stem cells, SCAPs stem cells of the apical papilla, PDLSCs stem cells of the periodontal ligament, BMSCs bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, MSCs mesenchymal stem cells
The effects of CGF on SCS regeneration in DPC regeneration and its potential molecular mechanism
| Authors (year) | Stem cells | Type of evaluation | Methods | Main result | Potential mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hong et al. (2019) [ | h-SCAPs | Proliferation, migration, and odonto/osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting kit-8; Transwell Filter Inserts; ARS and qPCR (ALP, DSPP, DMP-1) | CGF can significantly promote the proliferation, migration, and differentiation of SCAPs, and no dose-dependent manner effect. | More migration effect may be caused by the abundant chemotactic factors released from the CGF, including PDGF-BB and bFGF. |
| Hong et al. (2018) [ | h-SCAPs | Proliferation, migration, and odonto/osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting kit-8; Transwell assays; ARS and qPCR (ALP, DSPP, DMP-1) | CGF can significantly promote the proliferation, migration, and differentiation of SCAPs, and no dose-dependent manner effect. CGF had an early inhibitory effect on the odonto/osteogenic differentiation of SCAPs. | The early inhibitory effect may be caused by proinflammatory factors such as TNF-α and IL-1 in CGF. |
| Xu et al. (2019) [ | h-DPSCs exposed to LPS | Proliferation, migration, and odonto/osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting kit-8; Transwell assays; ALP activity, ARS, and qPCR (DMP-1, DSPP, OPN, RUNX2) | CGF promoted the proliferation, migration, and differentiation of DPSCs exposed to LPS in a dose-dependent manner. | The secretion of TNF-α and IL-8 in DPSCs treated by CGF could promote the DPSCs migration. |
| Tian et al. (2019) [ | h-DPSCs | Proliferation, migration, and odonto/osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting kit-8; Transwell assays; ALP activity, ARS, and qPCR (DMP-1, DSPP, BSP, RUNX2) | CGF promoted the proliferation and migration of DPSCs in a dose-dependent manner, and CGF enhanced DPSCs odonto/osteogenic differentiation by upregulating RUNX2 transcription. | BMP-2/SMAD5/Runx2 signaling axis is related to CGF-mediated DPSCs mineralization. |
| Jin et al. (2018) [ | h-DPSCs | Proliferation, migration, endothelial differentiation, and odontoblastic differentiation | Cell counting kit-8; Scratches; ALP activity, ARS, western blotting (VEGFR2, CD31), qRT-PCR (DMP-1, DSPP), and tube formation assay | CGF promoted the proliferation of DPSCs in a dose-dependent manner, and high concentrations of CGF inhibited the endothelial differentiation and odontoblastic differentiation of DPSCs. | The negative role of high-dosage CGF may be associated with the excess content of TGF-β, IL-1β, and IL-6 with increasing concentration. |
| Aghamohamadi et al. (2020) [ | h-PDLSCs | Proliferation | MTT assay | CGF promoted PDLSCs proliferation in no dose-dependent manner, and high concentrations of CGF markedly inhibited the proliferation of PDLSCs | The high-dosage inhibition effect is thought to be mediated by TGF-β and proteolytic enzymes. |
| Li et al. (2019) [ | h-PDLCs stimulated by TNF-α | Proliferation, osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting kit-8 assays; ARS, ALP activity, western blotting, and qPCR (OCN, OSX, RUNX2) | CGF enhanced h-PDLCs proliferation and osteogenic differentiation in the presence of TNF-α-induced inflammation. | TGF-β1 contained in CGF relieved the inhibitory effect of TNF-α on the osteogenic differentiation of h-PDLCs by inducing the upregulation of Runx2 transcription. |
| Yu and Wang (2014) [ | Beagle-PDLSCs | Proliferation, osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting and an MTT assay; Mineralization nodule counts, ALP activity, western blotting, qPCR (BSP, OCN, COL1a1), and immunohistochemistry | CGF promoted PDLSCs proliferation and osteogenic differentiation in a time- and dose-dependent manner. | |
| Rochira et al. (2020) [ | h-BMSCs | Osteogenic differentiation | ALP activity, ARS, western blotting, qPCR (RUNX2, OSX, OPN, COL1a1) | CGF alone can induce osteogenic differentiation in h-BMSCs. | High RUNX2 expression and RUNX2 nuclear translocation are molecular mechanisms of h-BMSCs osteogenic differentiation induced by CGF. |
| Honda et al. (2013) [ | hTERT-E6/E7 human MSCs | Proliferation, osteogenic differentiation | Cell counting; ALP activity, ARS, western blotting, qPCR (RUNX2, OSX, OPN, COL1a1) | CGF, at concentrations between 1 and 10%, promoted proliferation, osteogenic maturation, and mineralization of hTERT-E6/E7 human MSCs in a dose-dependent manner, and higher concentrations of CGF had an inhibitory effect. |
Abbreviations: DPSCs dental pulp stem cells. SCAPs stem cells of the apical papilla, PDLCs periodontal ligament cells, PDLSCs stem cells of the periodontal ligament, BMSCs bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, MSCs mesenchymal stem cells, PDGF-BB platelet-derived growth factor-BB, bFGF basic fibroblast growth factor, TNF-α tumour necrosis factor-α, IL interleukin, TGF-β transforming growth factor-β. ARS Alizarin Red S staining. ALP alkaline phosphatase. MTT 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide, DSPP dentin saliva phosphoprotein, DMP dentin matrix protein, COL1a 1collagen I, OCN osteocalcin, RUNX2 Runt-related homeobox2, BSP bone sialoprotein, OPN osteopontin, OSX osterix, VEGFR2 vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2, CD31 cluster of differentiation 31, SMAD mothers against decapentaplegic homolog, LPS lipopolysaccharide
Fig. 2Effects of CGF on SCs in DPC regeneration. The left part shows that CGF can regulate the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammatory response in stem cells by inhibiting the expression of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-8 and TNF-α but not IL-6. The right part shows that CGF can promote the proliferation, migration, and osteogenic/odontoblastic differentiation of stem cells
Fig. 3CGF used as root canal filling material in regenerative endodontic treatment. a An immature tooth with necrotic pulp. b Removal of decay lesion and necrotic pulp tissue. c CGF packed into the canals to the level of the cementoenamel junction and covered with and restored with composite resin. d After 12 months, pulp-like tissue formatted, root apex closure, and the thickness of the dentin increased
Fig. 4CGF used as pulp capping materials in vital pulp therapy. a A tooth with deep caries. b Removal of decay lesion and damaged coronal pulp tissue, and cavity preparation. c CGF placed on the remaining healthy radicular pulp tissue surface and covered with mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) and restored with composite resin. d Reparative dentin formatted and preservation of the pulp health and vitality