Back to Search Start Over

Odontoblast death drives cell-rich zone-derived dental tissue regeneration

Authors :
Koichi Matsuo
Kanji Horibe
Toshihide Mizoguchi
Miroku Hara
Lijuan Zhao
Shinichi Abe
Daisuke Nishida
Xianqi Li
Masashi Shin
Satoru Matsunaga
Akihiro Hosoya
Shinichirou Ito
Rinya Masuko
Hideaki Kagami
Nobuyuki Udagawa
Koji Okabe
Atsushi Arai
Yasuhiro Kobayashi
Source :
Bone. 150
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Severe dental tissue damage induces odontoblast death, after which dental pulp stem and progenitor cells (DPSCs) differentiate into odontoblast-like cells, contributing to reparative dentin. However, the damage-induced mechanism that triggers this regeneration process is still not clear. We aimed to understand the effect of odontoblast death without hard tissue damage on dental regeneration. Herein, using a Cre/LoxP-based strategy, we demonstrated that cell-rich zone (CZ)-localizing Nestin-GFP-positive and Nestin-GFP-negative cells proliferate and differentiate into odontoblast-like cells in response to odontoblast depletion. The regenerated odontoblast-like cells played a role in reparative dentin formation. RNA-sequencing analysis revealed that the expression of odontoblast differentiation- and activation-related genes was upregulated in the pulp in response to odontoblast depletion even without damage to dental tissue. In this regenerative process, the expression of type I parathyroid hormone receptor (PTH1R) increased in the odontoblast-depleted pulp, thereby boosting dentin formation. The levels of PTH1R and its downstream mediator, i.e., phosphorylated cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (Ser133) increased in the physically damaged pulp. Collectively, odontoblast death triggered the PTH1R cascade, which may represent a therapeutic target for inducing CZ-mediated dental regeneration.

Details

ISSN :
18732763
Volume :
150
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bone
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....811c90c61bb67c8e476c32e80c3f5bd1