Conditioned Media from Human Pulp Stem Cell Cultures Improve Bone Regeneration in Rat Calvarial Critical-Size Defects.
Leonardo Fernandes BussGustavo Sigrist de MartinElizabeth Ferreira MartinezIsabela Amanda de Abreu Araújo Porcaro FilgueirasJosé Luiz MagnaboscoBruno Frenhan AlvesBruno de Macedo AlmeidaTatiana KotakaMarcelo Lucchesi TeixeiraJosé Ricardo Muniz FerreiraDaniel Navarro da RochaRaul CanalAntonio Carlos AloiseLexie Shannon HollidayAndré Antonio PelegrinePublished in: Journal of functional biomaterials (2023)
The aim of this study was to test whether lyophilized conditioned media from human dental pulp mesenchymal stem cell cultures promote the healing of critical-size defects created in the calvaria of rats. Prior to the surgical procedure, the medium in which dental pulp stem cells were cultured was frozen and lyophilized. After general anesthesia, an 8 mm diameter bone defect was created in the calvaria of twenty-four rats. The defects were filled with the following materials: xenograft alone (G1) or xenograft associated with lyophilized conditioned medium (G2). After 14 or 42 days, the animals were euthanized, and the specimens processed for histologic and immunohistochemical analysis. Bone formation at the center of the defect was observed only in the G2 at 42 days. At both timepoints, increased staining for VEGF, a marker for angiogenesis, was observed in G2. Consistent with this, at 14 days, G2 also had a higher number of blood vessels detected by immunostaining with an anti-CD34 antibody. In conclusion, conditioned media from human dental pulp mesenchymal stem cell cultures had a positive effect on the regenerative process in rat critical-size bone defects. Both the formation of bone and enhancement of vascularization were stimulated by the conditioned media.