4.7 Article

Organoids from human tooth showing epithelial stemness phenotype and differentiation potential

Journal

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 79, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-022-04183-8

Keywords

Tooth; Organoids; Stem cells; Ameloblasts; Assembloids; TGF beta

Funding

  1. KU Leuven (Research Fund)
  2. Fund for Scientific Research (FWO) Flanders [1S84718N]

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Researchers have developed a novel organoid model starting from human tooth, allowing for the exploration of human tooth epithelial stem cell biology and their interaction with dental mesenchyme. These new models may pave the way for future tooth-regenerative perspectives.
Insight into human tooth epithelial stem cells and their biology is sparse. Tissue-derived organoid models typically replicate the tissue's epithelial stem cell compartment. Here, we developed a first-in-time epithelial organoid model starting from human tooth. Dental follicle (DF) tissue, isolated from unerupted wisdom teeth, efficiently generated epithelial organoids that were long-term expandable. The organoids displayed a tooth epithelial stemness phenotype similar to the DF's epithelial cell rests of Malassez (ERM), a compartment containing dental epithelial stem cells. Single-cell transcriptomics reinforced this organoid-ERM congruence, and uncovered novel, mouse-mirroring stem cell features. Exposure of the organoids to epidermal growth factor induced transient proliferation and eventual epithelial-mesenchymal transition, highly mimicking events taking place in the ERM in vivo. Moreover, the ERM stemness organoids were able to unfold an ameloblast differentiation process, further enhanced by transforming growth factor-beta (TGF beta) and abrogated by TGF beta receptor inhibition, thereby reproducing TGF beta's known key position in amelogenesis. Interestingly, by creating a mesenchymal-epithelial composite organoid (assembloid) model, we demonstrated that the presence of dental mesenchymal cells (i.e. pulp stem cells) triggered ameloblast differentiation in the epithelial stem cells, thus replicating the known importance of mesenchyme-epithelium interaction in tooth development and amelogenesis. Also here, differentiation was abrogated by TGF beta receptor inhibition. Together, we developed novel organoid models empowering the exploration of human tooth epithelial stem cell biology and function as well as their interplay with dental mesenchyme, all at present only poorly defined in humans. Moreover, the new models may pave the way to future tooth-regenerative perspectives.

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