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A modified glass ionomer cement to mediate dentine repair

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1307-1315
Number of pages9
JournalDental Materials
Volume37
Issue number8
DOIs
Accepted/In press2021
PublishedAug 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information: This study is part of PhD project of Abeer Alaohali funded by the Medical Services Division of the Ministry of Defense in Saudi Arabia and the Saudi Cultural Bureau in London. We thank Dhivya Chandrasekaran for providing animal support, Chris Healy for the ?CT analysis, Anne Poliard-Arias for the gift of the 171A4 cells, Abeer Alshaalan for assistance with saliva collection, Andrew Cakebread and Anna Caldwell for assistance with ICP-MS and Vitor Neves for his valuable assistance in the laboratory. ICP-MS analyses were performed at the London Metallomics Facility funded by the Wellcome Trust (202902/Z/16/Z). Funding from the NIHR GSTFT/KCL Biomedical Research Centre is acknowledged. Funding Information: This study is part of PhD project of Abeer Alaohali funded by the Medical Services Division of the Ministry of Defense in Saudi Arabia and the Saudi Cultural Bureau in London . We thank Dhivya Chandrasekaran for providing animal support, Chris Healy for the μCT analysis, Anne Poliard-Arias for the gift of the 171A4 cells, Abeer Alshaalan for assistance with saliva collection, Andrew Cakebread and Anna Caldwell for assistance with ICP-MS and Vitor Neves for his valuable assistance in the laboratory. ICP-MS analyses were performed at the London Metallomics Facility funded by the Wellcome Trust ( 202902/Z/16/Z ). Funding from the NIHR GSTFT/KCL Biomedical Research Centre is acknowledged. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Academy of Dental Materials Copyright: Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

King's Authors

Abstract

Objectives: Glass ionomer cements (GIC) can be used to protect dentine following caries removal. However, GIC have little biological activity on biological repair processes, which means that neo-dentine formation remains reliant on limited endogenous regenerative processes. Wnt/β-catenin signalling is known to play a central role in stimulating tertiary dentine formation following tooth damage and can be stimulated by a range of glycogen synthase kinase (GSK3) antagonists, including lithium ions. Methods: Here, we created lithium-containing bioactive glass (BG) by substituting lithium for sodium ions in 45S5 BG. We then replaced between 10 and 40% of the powder phase of a commercial GIC with the lithium-substituted BG to create a range of formulations of ‘LithGlassGIC’. In vitro physical properties of the resulting glasses were characterised and their ability to stimulate reactionary dentine formation in mouse molars in vivo was tested. Results: Lithium release from LithGlassGIC increased with increasing lithium content in the cement. In common with unmodified commercial GIC, all formations of LithGlassGIC showed in vitro toxicity when measured using an indirect cell culture assay based on ISO10993:5, precluding direct pulp contact. However, in a murine non-exposed pulp model of tooth damage, LithGlassGIC quickly released lithium ions, which could be transiently detected in the saliva and blood. LithGlassGIC also enhanced the formation of tertiary dentine, resulting in a thickening of the dentine at the damage site that restored lost dentine volume. Dentine regeneration was likely mediated by upregulation of Wnt/β-catenin activity, as LithGlassGIC placed in TCF/Lef:H2B-GFP reporter mice showed enhanced GFP activity. Significance: We conclude that LithGlassGIC acts as a biological restorative material that promotes tertiary dentine formation and restores tooth structure.

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