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Li, Y. ; Lu, Y. ; Maciejewska, I. ; Galler, Kerstin M. ; Cavender, A. ; D’Souza, R. N.

TWIST1 Promotes the Odontoblast-like Differentiation of Dental Stem Cells

Li, Y., Lu, Y., Maciejewska, I., Galler, Kerstin M., Cavender, A. and D’Souza, R. N. (2011) TWIST1 Promotes the Odontoblast-like Differentiation of Dental Stem Cells. Advances in dental research 23 (3), pp. 280-284.

Date of publication of this fulltext: 09 Aug 2016 10:36
Article
DOI to cite this document: 10.5283/epub.34178


Abstract

Stem cells derived from the dental pulp of extracted human third molars (DPSCs) have the potential to differentiate into odontoblasts, osteoblasts, adipocytes, and neural cells when provided with the appropriate conditions. To advance the use of DPSCs for dentin regeneration, it is important to replicate the permissive signals that drive terminal events in odontoblast differentiation during tooth ...

Stem cells derived from the dental pulp of extracted human third molars (DPSCs) have the potential to differentiate into odontoblasts, osteoblasts, adipocytes, and neural cells when provided with the appropriate conditions. To advance the use of DPSCs for dentin regeneration, it is important to replicate the permissive signals that drive terminal events in odontoblast differentiation during tooth development. Such a strategy is likely to restore a dentin matrix that more resembles the tubular nature of primary dentin. Due to the limitations of culture conditions, the use of ex vivo gene therapy to drive the terminal differentiation of mineralizing cells holds considerable promise. In these studies, we asked whether the forced expression of TWIST1 in DPSCs could alter the potential of these cells to differentiate into odontoblast-like cells. Since the partnership between Runx2 and Twist1 proteins is known to control the onset of osteoblast terminal differentiation, we hypothesized that these genes act to control lineage determination of DPSCs. For the first time, our results showed that Twist1 overexpression in DPSCs enhanced the expression of DSPP, a gene that marks odontoblast terminal differentiation. Furthermore, co-transfection assays showed that Twist1 stimulates Dspp promoter activity by antagonizing Runx2 function in 293FT cells. Analysis of our in vitro data, taken together, suggests that lineage specification of DPSCs can be modulated through ex vivo gene modifications.



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Details

Item typeArticle
Journal or Publication TitleAdvances in dental research
Publisher:Sage
Volume:23
Number of Issue or Book Chapter:3
Page Range:pp. 280-284
Date2011
InstitutionsMedicine > Lehrstuhl für Zahnerhaltung und Parodontologie
Identification Number
ValueType
10.1177/0022034511405387DOI
KeywordsTWIST1, RUNX2, dental stem cells, gene transfer, odontoblast, tooth development
Dewey Decimal Classification600 Technology > 610 Medical sciences Medicine
StatusPublished
RefereedYes, this version has been refereed
Created at the University of RegensburgPartially
URN of the UB Regensburgurn:nbn:de:bvb:355-epub-341786
Item ID34178

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