Affiliation: | a Department of Pharmacology, Osaka Dental University, 5-31, Otemae 1-chome, Chuo-ku, Osaka 540, Japan b Department of Chemistry, Osaka Dental University, 5-31, Otemae 1-chome, Chuo-ku, Osaka 540, Japan c Department of Orthodontics, Kanagawa Dental College, Inaoka-cho 82, Yokosuka, Kanagawa 238, Japan |
Abstract: | Pulp fibroblasts were isolated from human deciduous and supernumerary teeth and cultured in vitro. With continued culture in normal tissue-culture medium, six pulp fibroblast strains formed cell nodules after 10–15 days. By electron microscopy the nodules had matrix vesicles, and needle-shaped crystals associated with a dense network of collagen fibrils. The crystalline material exhibited a pattern consistent with hydroxyapatite when nodules were examined by X-ray diffractometry. Furthermore, the cells showed high levels of alkaline phosphatase activity, which could be increased more than seven-fold by the addition of 1,25(OH)2D3 (5 × 10−9−5 × 10−8M). In addition to the production of type I collagen, these cells also synthesized fibronectin and osteonectin. The formation of mineralized tissue nodules by pulp cells in vitro provides a useful system for study of the pathological calcification of pulp tissues. |