A 3D In-vitro model of the human dentine interface shows long-range osteoinduction from the dentine surface
Loading...
Date
Authors
Macalester, William
Boussahel, Asme
Moreno-Tortolero, Rafael O.
Shannon, Mark R.
West, Nicola
Hill, Darryl
Perriman, Adam
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Access Statement
Abstract
Emerging regenerative cell therapies for alveolar bone loss have begun to explore the use of cell laden hydrogels for minimally invasive surgery to treat small and spatially complex maxilla-oral defects. However, the oral cavity presents a unique and challenging environment for in vivo bone tissue engineering, exhibiting both hard and soft periodontal tissue as well as acting as key biocenosis for many distinct microbial communities that interact with both the external environment and internal body systems, which will impact on cell fate and subsequent treatment efficacy. Herein, we design and bioprint a facile 3D in vitro model of a human dentine interface to probe the effect of the dentine surface on human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) encapsulated in a microporous hydrogel bioink. We demonstrate that the dentine substrate induces osteogenic differentiation of encapsulated hMSCs, and that both dentine and β-tricalcium phosphate substrates stimulate extracellular matrix production and maturation at the gel-media interface, which is distal to the gel-substrate interface. Our findings demonstrate the potential for long-range effects on stem cells by mineralized surfaces during bone tissue engineering and provide a framework for the rapid development of 3D dentine-bone interface models.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
International journal of oral science
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description