The Effect of the Inflammatory Microenvironment on Odontogenic Differentiation of Dental Pulp Stem Cells.

IF 2
Stem cells and development Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-08-12 DOI:10.1177/15473287251366979
Shangzhou Jiang, Youkai Lin, Dingming Huang, Xuelian Tan
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Abstract

The dental pulp not only serves as the tooth's nutritional core but also creates a finely tuned microenvironment that is enriched with blood vessels, nerves, extracellular matrix components, and signaling molecules, all of which guide the fate of resident dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs). Trauma and microbial invasion disrupt this niche, leading to pulpitis and necrosis. Although conventional root canal treatment preserves the tooth's structure by removing infected pulp, it can increase tooth brittleness and impede root development in immature permanent teeth. Harnessing DPSCs' multipotency for pulp regeneration promises to restore the natural pulp-dentin complex in situ. Importantly, DPSCs encounter an inflammatory microenvironment composed of pathogen-associated molecular patterns, a spectrum of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, diverse immune cell phenotypes, and altered matrix signals. While earlier work examined the isolated effects of mediators such as lipopolysaccharide, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, or macrophage-derived exosomes on odontogenic differentiation, this review focuses on how these mediators collectively interact in both synergistic and antagonistic ways within the inflammatory niche. We systematically delineate how these collective stimuli converge on wingless/integrated/beta-catenin, mitogen-activated protein kinase, nuclear factor kappa-B (NF-κB), and bone morphogenetic protein/Sma and Mad related protein pathways to modulate key odontogenic markers (runt-related transcription factor 2, dentin sialophosphoprotein, dentin matrix protein 1, alkaline phosphatase) and mineralization outcomes. By applying a microenvironment-centric lens, we reveal novel targets and strategies to recalibrate inflammation, steer DPSCs toward reparative odontogenesis, and ultimately enhance the efficacy of regenerative endodontic therapies.

炎症微环境对牙髓干细胞成牙分化的影响。
牙髓不仅是牙齿的营养核心,而且还创造了一个精细调节的微环境,该微环境富含血管、神经、细胞外基质成分和信号分子,所有这些都指导着牙髓干细胞(DPSCs)的命运。创伤和微生物入侵破坏了这个生态位,导致牙髓炎和坏死。虽然传统的根管治疗通过去除受感染的牙髓来保持牙齿的结构,但它会增加牙齿的脆性并阻碍未成熟恒牙的牙根发育。利用DPSCs的多能性进行牙髓再生有望在原位恢复天然牙髓-牙本质复合物。重要的是,DPSCs遇到由病原体相关分子模式、一系列促炎性和抗炎性细胞因子、多种免疫细胞表型和改变的基质信号组成的炎症微环境。虽然早期的研究考察了脂多糖、肿瘤坏死因子- α或巨噬细胞来源的外泌体等介质对牙源性分化的孤立作用,但本文的重点是这些介质如何在炎症生态位中以协同和拮抗方式共同作用。我们系统地描述了这些集体刺激如何聚集在无翅/整合/ β -连环蛋白、丝裂原活化蛋白激酶、核因子κ b (NF-κB)和骨形态发生蛋白/Sma和Mad相关蛋白途径上,以调节关键的牙形成标志物(矮子相关转录因子2、牙本质唾液磷酸蛋白、牙本质基质蛋白1、碱性磷酸酶)和矿化结果。通过应用以微环境为中心的晶状体,我们揭示了新的靶点和策略来重新校准炎症,引导DPSCs走向修复性牙髓形成,并最终提高再生牙髓治疗的疗效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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