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Hypoxia enhances colony formation and proliferation but inhibits differentiation of human dental pulp cells

Archives of Oral Biology, ISSN: 0003-9969, Vol: 55, Issue: 9, Page: 648-654
2010
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Article Description

The hypoxia condition was expected to be suitable for the establishment and maintenance of human dental pulp cells (hDPCs), because they reside in a low-oxygen environment in vivo. Therefore, we presently examined the effects of hypoxia on the proliferation and differentiation of hDPCs in vitro. hDPCs grown under 3% O 2 showed a significantly higher proliferation rate than those under 21% O 2. Then, we prepared hypoxic cultures of hDPCs from older patients’ teeth having inflammation and succeeded in recovering and expanding a small number of hDPCs. These cells were confirmed to have capability for osteo/odontogenic differentiation. Hypoxia suppressed the osteo/odontogenic differentiation of hDPCs in vitro and increased the number of cells expressing STRO-1, an early mesenchymal stem cell marker. This simple method will increase the possibility to obtain living hDPCs from damaged and/or aged tissues, from which it is ordinarily difficult to isolate living stem cells with differentiation capability.

Bibliographic Details

Iida, Kazuki; Takeda-Kawaguchi, Tomoko; Tezuka, Yoko; Kunisada, Takahiro; Shibata, Toshiyuki; Tezuka, Ken-ichi

Elsevier BV

Medicine; Dentistry; Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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