4.8 Article

Parenchymal and stromal tissue regeneration of tooth organ by pivotal signals reinstated in decellularized matrix

Journal

NATURE MATERIALS
Volume 18, Issue 6, Pages 627-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0368-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01DE025643, R01DE023112, R01AR065023, R01DE025969, R01DE026297]
  2. Osteo Science Foundation
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81271110, 81170932, 81371136, 81570939, 81741106]
  4. Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals' Youth Programme [QML20161503]
  5. National Science and Technology Support Program [2014DFA31990]
  6. Program of International Science and Technology Cooperation [2014DFA31990]

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Cells are transplanted to regenerate an organs' parenchyma, but how transplanted parenchymal cells induce stromal regeneration is elusive. Despite the common use of a decellularized matrix, little is known as to the pivotal signals that must be restored for tissue or organ regeneration. We report that Alx3, a developmentally important gene, orchestrated adult parenchymal and stromal regeneration by directly transactivating Wnt3a and vascular endothelial growth factor. In contrast to the modest parenchyma formed by native adult progenitors, Alx3-restored cells in decellularized scaffolds not only produced vascularized stroma that involved vascular endothelial growth factor signalling, but also parenchymal dentin via the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway. In an orthotopic large-animal model following parenchyma and stroma ablation, Wnt3a-recruited endogenous cells regenerated neurovascular stroma and differentiated into parenchymal odontoblast-like cells that extended the processes into newly formed dentin with a structure-mechanical equivalency to native dentin. Thus, the Alx3-Wnt3a axis enables postnatal progenitors with a modest innate regenerative capacity to regenerate adult tissues. Depleted signals in the decellularized matrix may be reinstated by a developmentally pivotal gene or corresponding protein.

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