JOURNAL ARTICLE

A simvastatin-releasing scaffold with periodontal ligament stem cell sheets for periodontal regeneration

Bingjiao ZhaoJing ChenLi‐Ru ZhaoJiajia DengQiang Li

Year: 2020 Journal:   Journal of Applied Biomaterials & Functional Materials Vol: 18 Pages: 2280800019900094-2280800019900094   Publisher: SAGE Publishing

Abstract

Simvastatin (SIM) has been documented to induce the osteogenic differentiation of periodontal ligament stem cells (PDLSCs). To establish an efficient release system for periodontal regeneration, a polycaprolactone (PCL) membrane scaffold containing SIM was electrospun and evaluated. The obtained PCL–SIM membrane scaffold showed sustained release up to 28 days, without deleterious effect on proliferation of PDLSCs on the scaffolds. PDLSCs were seeded onto scaffolds and their osteogenic differentiation was evaluated. After 21 days, expressions of collagen type I, alkaline phosphatase and bone sialoprotein genes were significantly upregulated and mineralized matrix formation was increased on the PCL–SIM scaffolds compared with the PCL scaffolds. In a heterotopic periodontal regeneration model, a cell sheet–scaffold construct was assembled by placement of multilayers of PDLSC sheets on PCL or PCL–SIM scaffolds, and these were then placed between dentin and ceramic bovine bone for subcutaneous implantation in athymic mice. After 8 weeks, the PCL–SIM membrane showed formation of significantly more ectopic cementum-like mineral on the dentin surface. These findings demonstrated that the PCL–SIM membrane scaffold promotes cementum-like tissue formation by sustained drug release, suggesting the feasibility of its therapeutic use with PDLSC sheets to improve periodontal regeneration.

Keywords:
Periodontal ligament stem cells Regeneration (biology) Cementum Bone sialoprotein Scaffold Periodontal fiber Chemistry Cementoblast Biomedical engineering Alkaline phosphatase Dentin Materials science Dentistry Cell biology Medicine Osteocalcin Biology

Metrics

17
Cited By
2.41
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.86
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Periodontal Regeneration and Treatments
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Urology
Oral microbiology and periodontitis research
Health Sciences →  Dentistry →  Periodontics
Bone and Dental Protein Studies
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Rheumatology
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