4.5 Article

Bone Morphogenetic Protein-9 Effectively Induces Osteo/Odontoblastic Differentiation of the Reversibly Immortalized Stem Cells of Dental Apical Papilla

Journal

STEM CELLS AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 23, Issue 12, Pages 1405-1416

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/scd.2013.0580

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AT004418, AR50142, AR054381]
  2. 973 Program of Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of China [2011CB707900]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of China [81271183, 81301551]
  4. Chongqing Municipal Commission on Education [KJ130303, cstc2013jcyjA0093]
  5. University of Chicago Core Facility Subsidy Grant from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) of the National Institutes of Health [UL1 TR000430]
  6. Chongqing Municipal Commission on Science Technology [KJ130303, cstc2013jcyjA0093]

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Dental pulp/dentin regeneration using dental stem cells combined with odontogenic factors may offer great promise to treat and/or prevent premature tooth loss. We previously demonstrated that bone morphogenetic protein 9 (BMP9) is one of the most potent factors in inducing bone formation. Here, we investigate whether BMP9 can effectively induce odontogenic differentiation of the stem cells from mouse apical papilla (SCAPs). Using a reversible immortalization system expressing SV40 T flanked with Cre/loxP sites, we demonstrate that the SCAPs can be immortalized, resulting in immortalized SCAPs (iSCAPs) that express mesenchymal stem cell markers. BMP9 upregulates Runx2, Sox9, and PPARc2 and odontoblastic markers, and induces alkaline phosphatase activity and matrix mineralization in the iSCAPs. Cre-mediated removal of SV40 T antigen decreases iSCAP proliferation. The in vivo stem cell implantation studies indicate that iSCAPs can differentiate into bone, cartilage, and, to lesser extent, adipocytes upon BMP9 stimulation. Our results demonstrate that the conditionally iSCAPs not only maintain long-term cell proliferation but also retain the ability to differentiate into multiple lineages, including osteo/odontoblastic differentiation. Thus, the reversibly iSCAPs may serve as an important tool to study SCAP biology and SCAP translational use in tooth engineering. Further, BMP9 may be explored as a novel and efficacious factor for odontogenic regeneration.

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