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  4. Adipose tissue-derived stem cell in vitro differentiation in a three-dimensional dental bud structure.
 
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Adipose tissue-derived stem cell in vitro differentiation in a three-dimensional dental bud structure.

Author(s)
ASI Sponsor
Ferro, Federico
Spelat, Renza
Falini, Giuseppe
Subjects

Adipose Tissue

Adipose Tissue: cytol...

Adult

Blotting

Cell Lineage

Cell Separation

Cell Transdifferentia...

Cell Transdifferentia...

Electron

Flow Cytometry

Fluorescent Antibody ...

Humans

Immunohistochemistry

Mesenchymal Stem Cell...

Mesenchymal Stem Cell...

Microscopy

Odontogenesis

Odontogenesis: physio...

Reverse Transcriptase...

Tooth

Tooth: cytology

Tooth: growth & devel...

Transmission

Western

X-Ray Diffraction

Date Issued
2011-05-01
Abstract
Tooth morphogenesis requires sequential and reciprocal interactions between the cranial neural crest-derived mesenchymal cells and the stomadial epithelium, which regulate tooth morphogenesis and differentiation. We show how mesenchyme-derived single stem cell populations can be induced to transdifferentiate in vitro in a structure similar to a dental bud. The presence of stem cells in the adipose tissue has been previously reported. We incubated primary cultures of human adipose tissue-derived stem cells in a dental-inducing medium and cultured the aggregates in three-dimensional conditions. Four weeks later, cells formed a three-dimensional organized structure similar to a dental bud. Expression of dental tissue-related markers was tested assaying lineage-specific mRNA and proteins by RT-PCR, immunoblot, IHC, and physical-chemical analysis. In the induction medium, cells were positive for ameloblastic and odontoblastic markers as both mRNAs and proteins. Also, cells expressed epithelial, mesenchymal, and basement membrane markers with a positional relationship similar to the physiologic dental morphogenesis. Physical-chemical analysis revealed 200-nm and 50-nm oriented hydroxyapatite crystals as displayed in vivo by enamel and dentin, respectively. In conclusion, we show that adipose tissue-derived stem cells in vitro can transdifferentiate to produce a specific three-dimensional organization and phenotype resembling a dental bud even in the absence of structural matrix or scaffold to guide the developmental process.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/3610
ISSN
1525-2191
Journal
The American journal of pathology
URL
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=3081158&tool=pmcentrez&rendertype=abstract
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