Exploring How Cells React to Dental Scaffolds

Thu Dec 26 2024
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Scientists are always on the hunt for better materials to help grow new tissues. One recent study looked at how human cells from the periodontal ligament (the stuff that holds teeth in place) interact with thin sheets of bovine pericardium (basically, cow heart tissue). These sheets are thought to be great for growing new tissue because they support cell attachment and growth. In the lab, researchers grew these human cells and put them in contact with two different thicknesses of cow heart tissue: 0. 2 mm and 0. 4 mm. After a day, they checked out the cells under a powerful microscope. They were interested in how the cells' energy factories (mitochondria), protein makers (Golgi apparatus), and control centers (nuclei) looked and where they were inside the cells.
Guess what? The cells changed when they met the cow heart tissue! The bits of the cells that make proteins and energy were more active and plentiful compared to cells that didn't meet the tissue. In fact, there were more energy factories in the cells that touched the tissue. This suggests that the cells were working harder, probably because the cow heart tissue got them going. Using some math, the scientists showed that cells that met the tissue had more energy factories than those that didn't. This hints that the cow heart tissue might play an important role in helping tissue grow and regenerate.
https://localnews.ai/article/exploring-how-cells-react-to-dental-scaffolds-7cf21e27

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