International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2015)

A Hyaluronan-Based Scaffold for the in Vitro Construction of Dental Pulp-Like Tissue

  • Letizia Ferroni,
  • Chiara Gardin,
  • Stefano Sivolella,
  • Giulia Brunello,
  • Mario Berengo,
  • Adriano Piattelli,
  • Eriberto Bressan,
  • Barbara Zavan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms16034666
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
pp. 4666 – 4681

Abstract

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Dental pulp tissue supports the vitality of the tooth, but it is particularly vulnerable to external insults, such as mechanical trauma, chemical irritation or microbial invasion, which can lead to tissue necrosis. In the present work, we present an endodontic regeneration method based on the use of a tridimensional (3D) hyaluronan scaffold and human dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) to produce a functional dental pulp-like tissue in vitro. An enriched population of DPSCs was seeded onto hyaluronan-based non-woven meshes in the presence of differentiation factors to induce the commitment of stem cells to neuronal, glial, endothelial and osteogenic phenotypes. In vitro experiments, among which were gene expression profiling and immunofluorescence (IF) staining, proved the commitment of DPSCs to the main components of dental pulp tissue. In particular, the hyaluronan-DPSCs construct showed a dental pulp-like morphology consisting of several specialized cells growing inside the hyaluronan fibers. Furthermore, these constructs were implanted into rat calvarial critical-size defects. Histological analyses and gene expression profiling performed on hyaluronan-DPSCs grafts showed the regeneration of osteodentin-like tissue. Altogether, these data suggest the regenerative potential of the hyaluronan-DPSC engineered tissue.

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