4.2 Article

Decellularized Swine Dental Pulp as a Bioscaffold for Pulp Regeneration

Journal

BIOMED RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
Volume 2017, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

HINDAWI LTD
DOI: 10.1155/2017/9342714

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91649124, 81300896]
  2. Beijing Municipal Government Grants [PXM2016 014226 000034, PXM2016 014226 000006, PXM2015 014226 000116, PXM2015 014226 000055, PXM2015 014226 000052, PXM2014 014226 000048]
  3. Beijing NOVA Program [2015B062]
  4. Beijing Excellent Talent Project [2013D003034000046]
  5. [PXM2014 014226 000013]
  6. [PXM2014 014226 000053]
  7. [Z121100005212004]
  8. [PXM2013 014226 000055]
  9. [PXM2013 014226 000021]
  10. [PXM 2013 014226 07 000080]
  11. [TJSHG201310025005]

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Endodontic regeneration shows promise in treating dental pulp diseases; however, no suitable scaffolds exist for pulp regeneration. Acellular natural extracellular matrix (ECM) is a favorable scaffold for tissue regeneration since the anatomical structure and ECM of the natural tissues or organs are well-preserved. Xenogeneic ECM is superior to autologous or allogeneic ECM in tissue engineering for its unlimited resources. This study investigated the characteristics of decellularized dental pulp ECM from swine and evaluated whether it could mediate pulp regeneration. Dental pulps were acquired from the mandible anterior teeth of swine 12 months of age and decellularized with 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) combined with Triton X-100. Pulp regeneration was conducted by seeding human dental pulp stem cells into decellularized pulp and transplanted subcutaneously into nude mice for 8 weeks. The decellularized pulp demonstrated preserved natural shape and structure without any cellular components. Histological analysis showed excellent ECM preservation and pulp-like tissue, and newly formed mineralized tissues were regenerated after being transplanted in vivo. In conclusion, decellularized swine dental pulp maintains ECM components favoring stem cell proliferation and differentiation, thus representing a suitable scaffold for improving clinical outcomes and functions of teeth with dental pulp diseases.

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