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RESEARCH REPORT |
1 Department of Endodontics, Center of Excellence in Oral and Craniofacial Biology, Louisiana State University Health Science Center, School of Dentistry; and
2 Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Center of Excellence in Oral and Craniofacial Biology, Box 128, Louisiana State University Health Science Center, School of Dentistry, 1100 Florida Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70119;
* corresponding author, tlalli{at}lsuhsc.edu
| ABSTRACT |
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KEY WORDS: periodontal ligament gingival fibroblast cementogenesis endodontics
| INTRODUCTION |
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For many years, amalgam was accepted as the material of choice for endodontic surgery, but its use came into question when SEM studies showed gaps between the amalgam and the root canal wall, and when concerns about mercury toxicity developed (Dorn and Gartner, 1990). Zinc-oxide eugenol cements (ZOEC) have been suggested as alternate root-end filling materials (Torabinejad and Pitt Ford, 1996). ZOEC offers a better seal than amalgam and is not resorbable. It has high compressive and torsional strength, low solubility, is radiopaque, and has a neutral pH (Oynick and Oynick, 1978), and, in clinical examinations, the success rate was 75% for amalgam and 95% for ZOEC cement (Dorn and Gartner, 1990). A hybrid ionomer composite resin (HICR) (Geristore®, DenMat, Santa Maria, CA, USA) has been shown in clinical trials to be effective in restoring subgingival areas (Shuman, 1999). It is well-tolerated when used for perforation repairs, and evidence of tissue attachment has been demonstrated histologically (Dragoo, 1997).
A more recently developed material, mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA), has also been advocated for use as a root-end filling material. The principle components of MTA are tricalcium silicate, tricalcium aluminate, tricalcium oxide, and silicate oxide (Torabinejad et al., 1995c). The sealing ability of MTA is superior to that of amalgam and ZOEC, and its seal was not adversely affected by blood contamination (Torabinejad et al., 1993, 1994, 1995b). It was also less cytotoxic than amalgam, ZOEC, and IRM (Torabinejad et al., 1995b). MTA has also been demonstrated to support cementum deposition (Torabinejad et al., 1995d) with reduced inflammation (Koh et al., 1998; Torabinejad et al., 1998).
Fibroblasts are the predominant resident cell type of the periodontal connective tissue (Bartold et al., 2000). Gingival fibroblasts maintain the integrity of gingival connective tissue, while periodontal ligament (PDL) fibroblasts with specialized functions are responsible for the formation and maintenance of periodontal ligament fiber attachments as well as repair, remodeling, and regeneration of the adjacent alveolar bone and cementum (Boyko et al., 1981). Cementogenesis is similar to osteogenesis, requiring the regulated action of specialized cells (cementoblasts and osteoblasts) and potentially fibroblasts (Saygin et al., 2000). While PDL-derived cells and osteoprogenitors are possible precursors for cementoblasts, their origins, formation, and orientation are not well-understood (Pitaru et al., 1994).
The purpose of the present study is to assess the effects of these root-end filling materials on the survival of and osteogenic gene expression in PDL and gingival fibroblasts. We also examined the effects of these materials on cellular alkaline phosphatase activity as a potential indicator of cementogenesis.
| MATERIALS & METHODS |
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Preparation of Root-end Filling Materials
Mineral Trioxide Aggregate (MTA) (ProRootTM, Dentsply Tulsa Dental, Tulsa, OK, USA), Hybrid Ionomer Composite Resin (HICR) (Geristore®, DenMat Corporation, Santa Maria, CA, USA), zinc oxide eugenol cement (ZOEC) (SuperEBATM, Bosworth Corporation, Chicago, IL, USA), and amalgam (Tytin® slow set, Kerr Corporation, Orange, CA, USA) were all prepared according to manufacturers instructions and allowed to set for 24 hrs at 37°C in 100% humidity. We then pulverized the materials to increase surface area for potential cell contact and used a sieve to separate them into particle sizes between 180 and 500 µm. Cortical bone (Musculoskeletal Transplant Foundation, Edison, NJ, USA), 150450 µm, was also used as a particle control. In some cases, the particles were placed into 50-mL tubes containing 30 mL of HEPES buffer solution (N-[2-hydroxyethyl]piperazine-N'-[ethanesulfonic acid], pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl). We changed the solution daily for 2 wks to allow for removal of toxic by-products before the materials were utilized in the experiments.
Cell Survival and Proliferation Assay
Approximately 2 x 104 fibroblasts in a volume of 500 µL of MEM-
containing 10% fetal bovine serum were plated onto 24-well tissue culture plates. The plates then received either 50 mg of freshly mixed or washed materials. After incubation for 11 to 13 days, the relative number of cells in each sample was determined according to a fluorescent cell attachment protocol (Palaiologou et al., 2001). Briefly, a proprietary green fluorescent dye, CyQUANT GR (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, USA), exhibits strong fluorescence enhancement when bound to cellular nucleic acids. Under these conditions, this assay has a linear detection range extending from about 50 to 50,000 cells per microplate well, fluorescing at 530 nm when bound to DNA. The sample fluorescence is measured by means of a fluorescence microplate reader (FL500, BioTek Instruments, Winooski, VT, USA). All data were collected, each group of samples was averaged, and a mean and standard deviation were compared with the control value. ANOVA analysis was applied to all the values, and statistical significance was determined at p < 0.01.
Fibroblast Differentiation
PDL and gingival fibroblasts were plated in T-25 flasks at a density of 2 x 105 cells in MEM-
medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum, penicillin, streptomycin, dexamethasone (100 nM), ascorbic acid (50 µg/mL), and ß-glycerophosphate (10 mM) to promote differentiation along a mineralized (osteoblast-like) phenotype (Kuru et al., 1999; Lin et al., 1999). A 200-mg sample of each washed material was added to flasks of each cell type before incubation at 37°C in a humidified incubator gassed with 5% CO2 with media changes every 3 to 4 days. By day 3, cells formed a loose monolayer covering the entire surface of the flask, with roughly 20% of the cells in direct contact with the materials. The cells were harvested by trypsinization at days 1, 3, 7, and 14. RNA was extracted with the use of guanidine thiocynate, used as a template for reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain-reaction (RT-PCR), and visualized on ethidium-bromide-stained agarose gels (Palaiologou et al., 2001). PCR primers used in this study were: Ribosomal Subunit S15 (5'-TTCCGC AAGTTCACCTACC-3', 5'-CGGGCCGGCCATGCTTT ACG-3', 361 Bp, Accession# NM_001018), ß1 subunit of Integrin (5'-CAAAGGAACAGC AGAGAAGC-3', 5'-GTGGAAAACACCA GCAGC-3', 537 Bp, Accession# NM_002205), Vimentin (5'-ATG TTTCCAAG CCTGACC-3', 5'-CT GTCCATCTCTAGTTT AAACC-3', 584 Bp, Accession# X56134), Cellular Fibronectin (5'-ATTGATGCA CCATCCAACC-3', 5'-TCTGAGAGAGAGCTTCTTGTCC-3', 930 Bp, Accession# M10905), Collagen Type 1
1 (5'-GATTGA CCCCAACCAAGG-3', 5'-AGTGA CGCTGTAGGTGAAGC-3', 409 Bp, Accession# NM000088), Osteonidogen (5'-TCACACTACACCC TTAAGTCG-3', 5'-TCTAAAGCAAA GAGCCAGC-3', 432 Bp, Accession# D86425), Osteomodulin (5'-GTGATGTGTCCTTCTATTGACC-3', 5'-AAAGTCCCCTT CTGCTCC-3', 282 Bp, Accession# AB000114), Osteonectin (5'-TGTGTGACCCAGGACTACC-3', 5'-CACCACTCATTGTTAG AAAGC-3', 617 Bp, Accession# NM004598), TIED (5'-GAATT CCAGTGCGATATCACC-3', 5'-ACTTCCCACAATGACAA GAA CC-3', 652 Bp, Accession# AB008375), Pleiotrophin (5'-GGATGACCCCCAAATAGC-3', 5'-GAAA GGCAGGATGAT GACC-3', 637 Bp, Accession# AB004306), Periostin (5'-CACACTCTTTGCTCCCACC-3', 5'-GAATCGCACCGTTT CTCC-3', 650 Bp, Accession# D13665), Alkaline Phosphatase (5'-GCACCTGCCTTACTAACTCC-3', 5'-CATGATCACGTC AATGTCC-3', 626 Bp, Accession# AB011406), Osteopontin (5'-GCATCACCTGTGCCATACC-3', 5'-CATTCAACTCCTCGC TTTCC-3', 522 Bp, Accession# J04765), Bone Sialoprotein (5'-TTAGCTGCAATCCAGCTTCC-3', 5'-CTCCCCCTCGTATT CAACG-3', 408 Bp, Accession# NM004967), and Osteocalcin (5'-CATGAGAGCCCTCACAC TCC-3', 5'-CAGCCAACTCG TCACAGTCC-3', 254 Bp, Accession# X53698).
Alkaline Phosphatase Activity
PDL and gingival fibroblasts were plated into 24-well plates as described above and exposed to 50 mg of each root-end filling material for 117 days. Cells were rinsed three times in PBS and frozen to allow cells to undergo lysis. A 500-µL quantity of 1 mg/mL p-nitrophenol phosphate (PNPP) in 0.1 M diethanolamine (pH 8.3) was added to each well and incubated at 25°C for 30 min with gentle agitation. The enzymatic color reaction was stopped by the addition of 500 µL of 0.75 N NaOH, and the mixture was assayed for 405-nm absorbance in a microplate reader (FL600, BioTek, Winooski, VT, USA).
| RESULTS |
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1 chain), vimentin, fibronectin, TIED, periostin, osteonidogen, and BSP uniformly. Alkaline phosphatase and pleiotrophin expression increased after day 7 in culture. Cells cultured with amalgam and ZOEC did not survive past day 3 and rapidly lost expression of all of the transcripts examined (data not shown).
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Gingival fibroblasts
Gingival fibroblasts behaved similarly to periodontal ligament fibroblasts grown under these conditions (Figs. 2B
, 3
), with the exception that gingival fibroblasts grown on plastic or HICR did not express alkaline phosphatase or osteopontin, and the expression of both of these transcripts was induced only by the presence of MTA. In addition, osteonectin (whose expression increased with time on both plastic and MTA) was suppressed by HICR.
MTA Induces Alkaline Phosphatase Activity
In our assays, only MTA consistently induced significant levels of alkaline phosphatase activity, and did so for both gingival and PDL fibroblasts (Fig. 4
). Maximal enzyme activity was detected after 9 days in culture for both cell populations in the presence of washed MTA, while this expression was delayed for 24 days with fresh MTA. In addition, PDL fibroblasts displayed roughly twice the alkaline phosphatase activity of gingival fibroblasts. In contrast, HICR could induce alkaline phosphatase activity in PDL fibroblasts only when washed, although this activity was significantly less than that induced by MTA. Interestingly, PDL fibroblasts grown on plastic expressed lower but detectable levels of alkaline phosphatase activity between 7 and 11 days in culture, while gingival fibroblasts did not express similar levels of enzyme activity until day 13 through day 17. Thus, root-end filling materials differentially induced alkaline phosphatase activity in periodontal fibroblasts.
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| DISCUSSION |
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We hypothesized that MTA would induce fibroblasts to express genes associated with cementum formation. This is based on studies in both monkeys and dogs in which cementum deposition was histologically observed on this root-end filling material (Torabinejad et al., 1995d, 1997). Our results indicated that both periodontal ligament and gingival fibroblasts are capable of expressing genes indicative of osseous repair as well as cementum deposition, specifically alkaline phosphatase. Our results indicate that MTA induced premature and enhanced expression of alkaline phosphatase activity for both fibroblast populations. In contrast, HICR prompted alkaline phosphatase activity only in PDL fibroblasts, and to a lesser extent than MTA. Alkaline phosphatase is a phosphate-releasing protein, and its activity is considered an important indicator of bone formation and a phenotypic marker of osteoblasts (Kuru et al., 1999). The observation that alkaline phosphatase transcript levels peak prior to any detectable increase in alkaline phosphatase activity following exposure to MTA was not unexpected; however, the finding that enzyme activity levels increased after a decline in transcript levels was unexpected. Further studies will need to be performed for a more careful examination of the correlation of transcript and protein stability with respect to the regulation of functional levels of phosphatase activity.
Changes in expression patterns of several transcripts associated with hard-tissue formation were also detected. Periostin is an ECM protein that appears in cells with the ability to differentiate into osteoblasts. This protein is preferentially expressed in periosteum and periodontal ligament, indicating its potential role in bone and tooth formation and in the recruitment and attachment of osteoblast precursors in the periosteum (Horiuchi et al., 1999). This transcript was expressed in PDL and gingival fibroblasts cultured with MTA, but its expression was repressed when cultured with HICR. Osteonidogen is a member of a family of glycoproteins involved in the formation of a complex with type IV collagen and laminin and is thought to play a critical role in basement membrane assembly (Kang and Kramer, 2000). Osteonidogen was expressed when gingival fibroblasts were grown with MTA, but was reduced in the presence of HICR. In contrast, osteonidogen expression was delayed in PDL fibroblasts grown on HICR. Pleiotrophin (osteoblast-stimulating factor) promotes in vitro proliferation and differentiation of osteoblasts (Masuda et al., 1997). Its expression was repressed in PDL fibroblasts with both MTA and HICR. TIED expression was repressed in PDL fibroblasts in contact with HICR, but the function of this cell-surface protein related to the integrin ß subunit is unknown (Berg et al., 1999).
Analysis of our data indicates that MTA generally induces an osteogenic phenotype (alkaline phosphatase, osteonidogen, osteonectin, and osteopontin), while HICR tended to inhibit the expression of osteogenic transcripts (alkaline phosphatase, periostin, pleiotrophin). Thus, different root-end filling materials influence the differentiation of PDL and gingival fibroblasts in different ways.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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Received January 29, 2003; Last revision January 6, 2004; Accepted February 24, 2004
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