Continued Efforts to Grow Engineered Teeth in a Large Mammal

Engineering the growth of new adult teeth has been a work in progress for some years now. As noted here, researchers have moved on from small mammals such as rats and are attempting regrowth of teeth in pigs. The process involves implanting a artificial tooth bud into the jaw, made of a suitable mix of cells seeded into a scaffold material. In this case, the researchers used decellularized tooth bud extracellular matrix as the scaffold, ensuring the correct chemical cues are present. The challenge in all of this lies in controlling the shape and structure of the resulting tooth; a tooth bud implanted in the jaw in this way does not naturally result in a correctly shaped tooth, so something is still missing from the recipe.

The use of dental implants to replace lost or damaged teeth has become increasingly widespread due to their reported high survival and success rates. In reality, the long-term survival of dental implants remains a health concern, based on their short-term predicted survival of ~15 years, significant potential for jawbone resorption, and risk of peri-implantitis. The ability to create functional bioengineered teeth, composed of living tissues with properties similar to those of natural teeth, would be a significant improvement over currently used synthetic titanium implants.

To address this possibility, our research has focused on creating biological tooth substitutes. The study presented here validates a potentially clinically relevant bioengineered tooth replacement therapy for eventual use in humans. We created bioengineered tooth buds by seeding decellularized tooth bud (dTB) extracellular matrix (ECM) scaffolds with human dental pulp cells, porcine tooth bud-derived dental epithelial cells, and human umbilical vein endothelial cells. The resulting bioengineered tooth bud constructs were implanted in the mandibles of adult Yucatan minipigs and grown for 2 or 4 months. We observed the formation of tooth-like tissues, including tooth-supporting periodontal ligament tissues, in cell-seeded dTB ECM constructs.

Link: https://doi.org/10.1093/stcltm/szae076

Comments

At 7yo I crashed on my bicycle and have brown foreteeth. I've waited for this for years.

Posted by: Ronny at February 14th, 2025 8:12 AM

I thought the difficult part ( most important)to rebuild was the bone structure holding the teeth. That's why dentists always measures the pockets between teeth and gum. Lower numbers better, between 1 and 3.

Posted by: Robert at February 14th, 2025 10:54 AM
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