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Scientists Grow Mouse Teeth From Single Cells
Hurdles remain, but technology might someday regenerate other structures, organs
By Steven Reinberg HealthDay Reporter
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MONDAY, Feb. 19 (HealthDay News) -- Using tissue regeneration technology, Japanese researchers have been able to grow a new tooth from single mouse tooth cells and use it to replace natural teeth in a mouse.
The achievement is "a breakthrough in the development of bioengineered organs and proposes a novel concept for the organ replacement in future regenerative therapies," lead researcher Takashi Tsuji, associate professor, Department of Biological Technology, Tokyo University of Science, said in a prepared statement.
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Reporting in the Feb. 19 online issue of the journal Nature Methods, Tsuji's team started by using the two cell types that form teeth -- mesenchymal and epithelial cells. They grew sufficient quantities of each of these cells and then injected them into a drop of collagen. This eventually developed into a budding tooth, which they transplanted into the cavity left by an extracted tooth in a mouse.
The new tooth developed normally and had the same composition and structure as natural teeth, the researchers reported. Ultimately, such bioengineered teeth could be used instead of inlays or synthetic implants, they said.
In addition, the new method might be applied to re-growing other organs. In fact, the researchers used similar methods to re-grow a mouse hair follicle that would eventually form a whisker.
"This method would be able to adopt the reconstitution of a wide variety of organs such as whisker, hair follicle, kidney and liver," Tsuji said.
He said the study increases the understanding of principles by which organ reconstitution can be achieved using bioengineered tissues.
"Our results therefore make a substantial contribution to the development of bioengineering technologies and the future reconstitution of primordial organs," the Japanese researcher said. "Our present findings should also encourage the future development of organ replacement by regenerative therapy."
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Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 2/19/2007
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SOURCES: Takashi Tsuji, Ph.D., associate professor, Department of Biological Technology, Tokyo University of Science, Japan; Pamela C. Yelick, Ph.D., director, Division of Craniofacial and Molecular Genetics, associate professor, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, Tufts University, Boston; Feb. 19, 2007, online edition, Nature Methods
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