The periodontal ligament (PDL) is highly ordered connective tissue located between the alveolar bone and cementum. An aligned and organized architecture is required for its physiological function. We applied micropatterning… Click to show full abstract
The periodontal ligament (PDL) is highly ordered connective tissue located between the alveolar bone and cementum. An aligned and organized architecture is required for its physiological function. We applied micropatterning technology to arrange PDL cells in 10- or 20-μm-wide extracellular protein patterns. Cell and nuclear morphology, cytoskeleton, proliferation, differentiation, and matrix metalloproteinase system expression were investigated. Micropatterning clearly elongated PDL cells with a low cell-shape index and low spreading area. The nucleus was also elongated as nuclear height increased, but the nuclear volume remained intact. The cytoskeleton was rearranged to form prominent bundles at cells' peripheral regions. Moreover, proliferation was promoted by 10- and 20-μm micropatterning. Osteogenesis and adipogenesis were each inhibited, but micropatterning increased PDL cells' stem cell markers. β-catenin was expelled to cytoplasm. YAP/TAZ nuclear localization and activity both decreased, which might indicate their role in micropatterning-regulated differentiation. Collagen Ι expression increased in micropatterned groups. It might be due to the decreased expression of matrix metalloproteinase-1, 2 and the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 gene expression elevation in micropatterned groups. The findings of this study provide insight into the effects of a micropatterned surface on PDL cell behavior and may be applicable in periodontal tissue regeneration.
               
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