Effect of sugarcane cystatin CaneCPI-5 on osteogenic differentiation of human dental pulp cells
Ana Flávia Balestrero Cassiano, Eduardo Pereira de Souza, Hernán Coaguila-Llerena, Flávio Henrique-Silva, Gisele Faria

TL;DR
This study shows that a plant protein called CaneCPI-5 can boost the growth and bone-like tissue formation of dental pulp stem cells, which could help in tooth repair.
Contribution
The novel contribution is demonstrating the pro-osteogenic effects of sugarcane-derived CaneCPI-5 on human dental pulp stem cells.
Findings
CaneCPI-5 was cytocompatible and increased migration and proliferation of hDPSCs.
CaneCPI-5 enhanced mineralized nodule formation and alkaline phosphatase activity in hDPSCs.
The results suggest CaneCPI-5 could be useful in endodontic regeneration therapies.
Abstract
For pulp and periapical repair, or endodontic regeneration to occur, it is necessary for mesenchymal stem cells from the apical papilla and/or dental pulp to proliferate, migrate to the site of injury, and differentiate into cells that produce mineralized tissue. Therefore, materials used in endodontic therapy should stimulate those events. Phytocystatins are plant-derived cystatins capable of inhibiting cathepsins. Some of them are produced recombinantly, such as CaneCPI-5 (derived from sugar cane). Considering their pro-osteogenic potential, this study aimed to assess the cytocompatibility and effect of CaneCPI-5 on the proliferation, migration, and osteogenic differentiation of human dental pulp stem cells (hDPSCs). The hDPSCs exposed to CaneCPI-5 and unexposed (control) were evaluated as follows: cell viability, by alamarBlue assay; proliferation, by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone and Dental Protein Studies · Endodontics and Root Canal Treatments · Dental Erosion and Treatment
