成牙本质细胞
牙髓干细胞
细胞生物学
牙髓(牙)
间质细胞
人口
牙本质涎磷蛋白
骨髓
牙本质形成
干细胞
生物
化学
矿化组织
牙本质
病理
解剖
免疫学
医学
癌症研究
环境卫生
作者
Stan Gronthos,Mahesh H. Mankani,Jaime S. Brahim,Pamela Gehron Robey,Songtao Shi
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.240309797
摘要
Dentinal repair in the postnatal organism occurs through the activity of specialized cells, odontoblasts, that are thought to be maintained by an as yet undefined precursor population associated with pulp tissue. In this study, we isolated a clonogenic, rapidly proliferative population of cells from adult human dental pulp. These DPSCs were then compared with human bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs), known precursors of osteoblasts. Although they share a similar immunophenotype in vitro, functional studies showed that DPSCs produced only sporadic, but densely calcified nodules, and did not form adipocytes, whereas BMSCs routinely calcified throughout the adherent cell layer with clusters of lipid-laden adipocytes. When DPSCs were transplanted into immunocompromised mice, they generated a dentin-like structure lined with human odontoblast-like cells that surrounded a pulp-like interstitial tissue. In contrast, BMSCs formed lamellar bone containing osteocytes and surface-lining osteoblasts, surrounding a fibrous vascular tissue with active hematopoiesis and adipocytes. This study isolates postnatal human DPSCs that have the ability to form a dentin/pulp-like complex.
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