Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement

For clinical treatment of tooth defects and tooth loss, nonbiotechnological approaches, such as the use of prostheses and implants, have generally been employed. Dental regenerative therapies which restore or replace defective teeth using autologous explants are being investigated using current unde...

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Main Authors: Kazuhisa Nakao, Takashi Tsuji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2008-07-01
Series:Japanese Dental Science Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1882761608000070
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spelling doaj-be1b6cce7f6e44388ca69caae71884ee2020-11-24T23:22:34ZengElsevierJapanese Dental Science Review1882-76162008-07-01441707510.1016/j.jdsr.2007.11.001Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacementKazuhisa Nakao0Takashi Tsuji1Department of Biological Science and Technology, Faculty of Industrial Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science, Noda, JapanDepartment of Biological Science and Technology, Faculty of Industrial Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science, Noda, JapanFor clinical treatment of tooth defects and tooth loss, nonbiotechnological approaches, such as the use of prostheses and implants, have generally been employed. Dental regenerative therapies which restore or replace defective teeth using autologous explants are being investigated using current understandings of developmental biology, stem cell biology, and regenerative medicine. Recently, dental tissue stem/progenitor cells, which can differentiate into dental cell lineages, have been identified in both impacted and erupted human teeth, and these cells can be used to regenerate some dental tissues. Tissue engineering using scaffold and cell aggregate methods may also be used to produce bioengineered teeth from dissociated cells for therapeutic applications of whole tooth replacement. Recent breakthroughs in single cell manipulation methods for the reconstitution of bioengineered tooth germ and the investigation of in vivo development of artificial tooth germ in the adult oral environment have been reported. These researches and developments will ultimately lead to the realization of dental regenerative therapies for partial repair by stem cell transplantation and for whole tooth replacement using bioengineered tooth germ.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1882761608000070Dental regenerative therapyStem cellsBioengineered toothCell aggregate methodTooth germ
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kazuhisa Nakao
Takashi Tsuji
spellingShingle Kazuhisa Nakao
Takashi Tsuji
Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
Japanese Dental Science Review
Dental regenerative therapy
Stem cells
Bioengineered tooth
Cell aggregate method
Tooth germ
author_facet Kazuhisa Nakao
Takashi Tsuji
author_sort Kazuhisa Nakao
title Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
title_short Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
title_full Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
title_fullStr Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
title_full_unstemmed Dental regenerative therapy: Stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
title_sort dental regenerative therapy: stem cell transplantation and bioengineered tooth replacement
publisher Elsevier
series Japanese Dental Science Review
issn 1882-7616
publishDate 2008-07-01
description For clinical treatment of tooth defects and tooth loss, nonbiotechnological approaches, such as the use of prostheses and implants, have generally been employed. Dental regenerative therapies which restore or replace defective teeth using autologous explants are being investigated using current understandings of developmental biology, stem cell biology, and regenerative medicine. Recently, dental tissue stem/progenitor cells, which can differentiate into dental cell lineages, have been identified in both impacted and erupted human teeth, and these cells can be used to regenerate some dental tissues. Tissue engineering using scaffold and cell aggregate methods may also be used to produce bioengineered teeth from dissociated cells for therapeutic applications of whole tooth replacement. Recent breakthroughs in single cell manipulation methods for the reconstitution of bioengineered tooth germ and the investigation of in vivo development of artificial tooth germ in the adult oral environment have been reported. These researches and developments will ultimately lead to the realization of dental regenerative therapies for partial repair by stem cell transplantation and for whole tooth replacement using bioengineered tooth germ.
topic Dental regenerative therapy
Stem cells
Bioengineered tooth
Cell aggregate method
Tooth germ
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1882761608000070
work_keys_str_mv AT kazuhisanakao dentalregenerativetherapystemcelltransplantationandbioengineeredtoothreplacement
AT takashitsuji dentalregenerativetherapystemcelltransplantationandbioengineeredtoothreplacement
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