Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications

Dental pulp is a highly vascularized and innervated tissue that provides sensitivity and vitality to the tooth. Chronic caries results in an infected pulp tissue prone to necrosis. Existing clinical treatments replace the living pulp tissue with a non-responsive resin filling resulting in loss of to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chun-Chieh Huang, Raghuvaran Narayanan, Noah Warshawsky, Sriram Ravindran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.00495/full
id doaj-8b105ebf2b554b67a19a850c9f0a38b0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8b105ebf2b554b67a19a850c9f0a38b02020-11-24T21:24:54ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2018-05-01910.3389/fphys.2018.00495343520Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative ApplicationsChun-Chieh Huang0Chun-Chieh Huang1Raghuvaran Narayanan2Raghuvaran Narayanan3Noah Warshawsky4Noah Warshawsky5Sriram Ravindran6Sriram Ravindran7Department of Oral Biology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Endodontics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Oral Biology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Endodontics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Oral Biology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Endodontics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Oral Biology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Endodontics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United StatesDental pulp is a highly vascularized and innervated tissue that provides sensitivity and vitality to the tooth. Chronic caries results in an infected pulp tissue prone to necrosis. Existing clinical treatments replace the living pulp tissue with a non-responsive resin filling resulting in loss of tooth vitality. Tissue engineering approaches to dental pulp tissue regeneration have been investigated to preserve tooth vitality and function. However, a critical criterion is the choice of growth factors that may promote mesenchymal stem cell differentiation and more importantly, vascularization. But, the problems associated with growth factor dosage, delivery, safety, immunological and ectopic complications affect their translatory potential severely. The purpose of this study is to develop, characterize and evaluate a biomimetic native extracellular matrix (ECM) derived dual ECM scaffold that consists of a pulp-specific ECM to promote MSC attachment, proliferation and differentiation and an endothelial ECM to promote migration of host endothelial cells and eventual vascularization in vivo. Our results show that the dual ECM scaffolds possess similar properties as a pulp-ECM scaffold to promote MSC attachment and odontogenic differentiation in vitro. Additionally, when implanted subcutaneously in a tooth root slice model in vivo, the dual ECM scaffolds promoted robust odontogenic differentiation of both dental pulp and bone marrow derived MSCs and also extensive vascularization when compared to respective controls. These scaffolds are mass producible for clinical use and hence have the potential to replace root canal therapy as a treatment for chronic dental caries.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.00495/fulldental pulp regenerationbiomimetic scaffoldsextracellular matrixdental pulp stem cellspro-angiogenic matrix
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chun-Chieh Huang
Chun-Chieh Huang
Raghuvaran Narayanan
Raghuvaran Narayanan
Noah Warshawsky
Noah Warshawsky
Sriram Ravindran
Sriram Ravindran
spellingShingle Chun-Chieh Huang
Chun-Chieh Huang
Raghuvaran Narayanan
Raghuvaran Narayanan
Noah Warshawsky
Noah Warshawsky
Sriram Ravindran
Sriram Ravindran
Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications
Frontiers in Physiology
dental pulp regeneration
biomimetic scaffolds
extracellular matrix
dental pulp stem cells
pro-angiogenic matrix
author_facet Chun-Chieh Huang
Chun-Chieh Huang
Raghuvaran Narayanan
Raghuvaran Narayanan
Noah Warshawsky
Noah Warshawsky
Sriram Ravindran
Sriram Ravindran
author_sort Chun-Chieh Huang
title Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications
title_short Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications
title_full Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications
title_fullStr Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications
title_full_unstemmed Dual ECM Biomimetic Scaffolds for Dental Pulp Regenerative Applications
title_sort dual ecm biomimetic scaffolds for dental pulp regenerative applications
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Dental pulp is a highly vascularized and innervated tissue that provides sensitivity and vitality to the tooth. Chronic caries results in an infected pulp tissue prone to necrosis. Existing clinical treatments replace the living pulp tissue with a non-responsive resin filling resulting in loss of tooth vitality. Tissue engineering approaches to dental pulp tissue regeneration have been investigated to preserve tooth vitality and function. However, a critical criterion is the choice of growth factors that may promote mesenchymal stem cell differentiation and more importantly, vascularization. But, the problems associated with growth factor dosage, delivery, safety, immunological and ectopic complications affect their translatory potential severely. The purpose of this study is to develop, characterize and evaluate a biomimetic native extracellular matrix (ECM) derived dual ECM scaffold that consists of a pulp-specific ECM to promote MSC attachment, proliferation and differentiation and an endothelial ECM to promote migration of host endothelial cells and eventual vascularization in vivo. Our results show that the dual ECM scaffolds possess similar properties as a pulp-ECM scaffold to promote MSC attachment and odontogenic differentiation in vitro. Additionally, when implanted subcutaneously in a tooth root slice model in vivo, the dual ECM scaffolds promoted robust odontogenic differentiation of both dental pulp and bone marrow derived MSCs and also extensive vascularization when compared to respective controls. These scaffolds are mass producible for clinical use and hence have the potential to replace root canal therapy as a treatment for chronic dental caries.
topic dental pulp regeneration
biomimetic scaffolds
extracellular matrix
dental pulp stem cells
pro-angiogenic matrix
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.00495/full
work_keys_str_mv AT chunchiehhuang dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT chunchiehhuang dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT raghuvarannarayanan dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT raghuvarannarayanan dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT noahwarshawsky dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT noahwarshawsky dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT sriramravindran dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
AT sriramravindran dualecmbiomimeticscaffoldsfordentalpulpregenerativeapplications
_version_ 1725986248935342080