The Wisdom in Teeth

Sramkó, Bendegúz [Sramkó, Bendegúz Gábor (Neurobiológia), author] Transzlációs Medicina Intézet (SU / FM / I); HCEMM-SU Neurobiology and Neurodegenerative Dis... (SU / FM / I / TMI); Földes, Anna [Földes, Anna (Molekulár biológi...), author] Department of Oral Biology (SU / FD); Kádár, Kristóf [Kádár, Kristóf György (Orálbiológia), author] Department of Oral Biology (SU / FD); Varga, Gábor [Varga, Gábor (Élettan, orálbiol...), author] Department of Oral Biology (SU / FD); Zsembery, Ákos [Zsembery, Ákos (Élettan), author] Department of Oral Biology (SU / FD); Pircs, Karolina ✉ [Pircs, Karolina Milena (biológia), author] Transzlációs Medicina Intézet (SU / FM / I); HCEMM-SU Neurobiology and Neurodegenerative Dis... (SU / FM / I / TMI)

English Survey paper (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: CELLULAR REPROGRAMMING 2152-4971 2152-4998 25 (1) pp. 32-44 2023
  • SJR Scopus - Biotechnology: Q3
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (STIA-KFI-2020)
  • (STIA-PoC-2020)
  • (TKP2021-EGA-23) Funder: Ministry for Innovation and Technology
  • (TKP-NVA-20)
  • (ICGEB CRP/HUN21-05_EC)
  • (739593) Funder: Horizon 2020
  • (NKFIH K-125161)
  • (FEIF/646-4/2021-ITM_SZERZ)
Subjects:
  • Dentistry, oral surgery and medicine
Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) are found in almost all postnatal organs. Under appropriate environmental cues, multipotency enables MSCs to serve as progenitors for several lineage-specific, differentiated cell types. In vitro expansion and differentiation of MSCs give the opportunity to obtain hardly available somatic cells, such as neurons. The neurogenic potential of MSCs makes them a promising, autologous source to restore damaged tissue and as such, they have received much attention in the field of regenerative medicine. Several stem cell pool candidates have been studied thus far, but only a few of them showed neurogenic differentiation potential. Due to their embryonic ontology, stem cells residing in the stroma of the dental pulp chamber are an exciting source for in vitro neural cell differentiation. In this study, we review the key properties of dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs), with a particular focus on their neurogenic potential. Moreover, we summarize the various presently available methods used for neural differentiation of human DPSCs also emphasizing the difficulties in reproducibly high production of such cells. We postulate that because DPSCs are stem cells with very close ontology to neurogenic lineages, they may serve as excellent targets for neuronal differentiation in vitro and even for direct reprogramming.
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2025-04-10 17:29