Researchers Look to Alligator Teeth as Model for Human Tooth Regeneration

 Researchers Look to Alligator Teeth as Model for Human Tooth Regeneration

A new study of how alligator teeth are built at the cellular and molecular levels may provide a model for development of technologies to regenerate lost human teeth.

A team of researchers led by the Keck School of Medicine of USC have been looking into how alligators are able to repeatedly regenerate new teeth throughout their lives, and found a specialized stem cell niche that keeps the next alligator tooth ready for whenever it is needed.

The researchers found alligator teeth are made up of three parts, the functional tooth, a replacement tooth and a layer of dental lamina. The research points to the layer of dental lamina containing the stem cells that drive the replacement of the teeth, according to a press release.

While understanding how the alligator tooth replacement process functions is important, the researchers hope to use this as a building block into future research looking at ways to apply this process to human teeth. The next steps will be isolating the stem cells in the alligator lamina to see if they can be used to grow teeth in a lab and to look at the molecular networks involved in the regrowth of alligator teeth.

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Source: Keck School of Medicine of USC

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