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Baby teeth revealed as source of stem cells
 
22:00 21 April 03
 
NewScientist.com news service

The tooth fairy could soon face competition for baby teeth from
scientists who have discovered the teeth are a source of stem cells.
The cells could help repair damaged teeth and perhaps even treat
neural injuries or degenerative diseases.

Currently, researchers can isolate two types of stem cells. Embryonic
stem cells can develop into any cell in the body, but their
harvesting requires the destruction of embryos, which pro-life groups
oppose. Adult stem cells avoid this problem, but have more limited
abilities. Now it appears that the stem cells from children's lost
teeth could provide an intermediate and easily accessible source.

"These stem cells seem to grow faster and have more potential to
differentiate into other cell types than adult stem cells," says
Songtao Shi, a pediatric dentist at the US National Institutes of
Health in Bethesda, Maryland. Shi and his colleagues found the baby
teeth cells can differentiate into tooth-forming cells called
ondontoblasts, and also neural cells and fat cells.

Baby teeth, also called milk teeth or deciduous teeth, appear from
the age of about six months and then fall out when children are
between six and 13 years old.

Daughter cells

Previous work by Shi in 2000 had already shown that extracted adult
wisdom teeth contain stem cells in the pulp at the centre of the
tooth (PNAS, vol 97, p 13625). So when his six-year old daughter and
her friends started losing their baby teeth, he decided to see if
they also contained stem cells.

Whenever a tooth fell out, instead of putting it under the pillow,
the parents stored the tooth in a glass of milk in the refrigerator
overnight.

To isolate the stem cells, Shi extracted the pulp and cultured the
cells for several days, then tested the survivors for markers of stem
cell activity. About 12 to 20 cells from a typical incisor tooth turn
out to be stem cells.

By culturing the cells in various growth factors, Shi could
differentiate the cells into tooth-forming cells, fat cells or neural
cells. The differentiated cells survived when implanted under the
skin and in the brain of immunocompromised mice.

Shi also found that the cells promote the growth of bone. He suspects
the stem cells may play a role in preparing the way for adult teeth.
"We don't have evidence at the moment, but we think these stem cells
do have a reason to be there."

The discovery of stem cells in baby teeth could give a big boost to
oral surgery, says oral biologist Bjorn Reino Olsen, at Harvard
Medical School. The cells, once differentiated into odontoblasts,
could secrete dentine. This bone-like material could then replace the
less biocompatible metal posts that are currently used to anchor
implants to the jaw.

Journal reference:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0937635100)

Catherine Zandonella

SOURCE: New Scientist Magazine
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993643

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