4.7 Article

Mouse Wnt1-CRE-RosaTomato Dental Pulp Stem Cells Directly Contribute to the Calvarial Bone Regeneration Process

Journal

STEM CELLS
Volume 37, Issue 5, Pages 701-711

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1002/stem.2973

Keywords

Tissue engineering; Tissue regeneration; Mesenchymal stem cells; In vivo tracking; Hypoxia; Chondrogenesis

Funding

  1. University Paris Descartes
  2. Fondation des Gueules Cassees
  3. National French Agency for Research (ANR PulpCell 2014-2018)
  4. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale for Plateforme d'Imagerie du Vivant of Universite Paris Descartes [FRM DGE20111123012]
  5. DIM ile de France Biotherapies

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Stem cells endowed with skeletogenic potentials seeded in specific scaffolds are considered attractive tissue engineering strategies for treating large bone defects. In the context of craniofacial bone, mesenchymal stromal/stem cells derived from the dental pulp (DPSCs) have demonstrated significant osteogenic properties. Their neural crest embryonic origin further makes them a potential accessible therapeutic tool to repair craniofacial bone. The stem cells' direct involvement in the repair process versus a paracrine effect is however still discussed. To clarify this question, we have followed the fate of fluorescent murine DPSCs derived from PN3 Wnt1-CRE- Rosa(Tamata) mouse molar (T-mDPSCs) during the repair process of calvaria bone defects. Two symmetrical critical defects created on each parietal region were filled with (a) dense collagen scaffolds seeded with T-mDPSCs, (b) noncellularized scaffolds, or (c) no scaffold. Mice were imaged over a 3-month period by microcomputed tomography to evaluate the extent of repair and by biphotonic microscopy to track T-mDPSCs. Histological and immunocytochemical analyses were performed in parallel to characterize the nature of the repaired tissue. We show that T-mDPSCs are present up to 3 months postimplantation in the healing defect and that they rapidly differentiate in chondrocyte-like cells expressing all the expected characteristic markers. T-mDPSCs further maturate into hypertrophic chondrocytes and likely signal to host progenitors that form new bone tissue. This demonstrates that implanted T-mDPSCs are able to survive in the defect microenvironment and to participate directly in repair via an endochondral bone ossification-like process.

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