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Human postnatal dental pulp cells co-differentiate into osteoblasts and endotheliocytes: a pivotal synergy leading to adult bone tissue formation

Authors :
Gianpaolo Papaccio
Gregorio Laino
R D'Aquino
A. De Rosa
Antonio Graziano
Giuseppe Pirozzi
Maurilio Sampaolesi
D'Aquino, R.
Graziano, A.
Sampaolesi, M.
Laino, Gregorio
Pirozzi, G.
DE ROSA, Alfredo
Papaccio, Gianpaolo
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2007.

Abstract

Stromal stem cells from human dental pulp (SBP-DPSCs) were used to study osteogenic differentiation in vitro and in vivo. We previously reported that SBP-DPSCs are multipotent stem cells able to differentiate into osteoblasts, which synthesize three-dimensional woven bone tissue chips in vitro. In this study, we followed the temporal expression pattern of specific markers in SBP-DPSCs and found that, when differentiating into osteoblasts, they express, besides osteocalcin, also flk-1 (VEGF-R2). In addition, 30% of them expressed specific antigens for endothelial cells, including CD54, von-Willebrand ( domain 1 and 2), CD31 (PECAM-1) and angiotensin-converting enzyme. Interestingly, we found endotheliocytes forming vessel walls, observing that stem cells synergically differentiate into osteoblasts and endotheliocytes, and that flk-1 exerts a pivotal role in coupling osteoblast and endotheliocyte differentiation. When either SBP-DPSCs or bone chips obtained in vitro were transplanted into immunocompromised rats, they generated a tissue structure with an integral blood supply similar to that of human adult bone; in fact, a large number of HLA-1(+) vessels were observed either within the bone or surrounding it in a periosteal layer. This study provides direct evidence to suggest that osteogenesis and angiogenesis mediated by human SBP-DPSCs may be regulated by distinct mechanisms, leading to the organization of adult bone tissue after stem cell transplantion. ispartof: Cell Death and Differentiation vol:14 issue:6 pages:1162-1171 ispartof: location:England status: published

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f4493072c63f81a88e61668384315af