Scientists Grow Replacement Human Teeth In Mouse Kidneys 117
sciencehabit writes "When an adult loses a tooth, there's no hope of growing a new one—unless you've got a mouse kidney handy. In a new study, researchers injected human gum tissue extracted during oral surgery into the molars of fetal mice. After giving the cells a week to get used to each other, the scientists implanted the chimeric concoction into the protective tissue surrounding the kidneys of living mice. There, 20% of the cells developed into objects recognizable as teeth, complete with the root structures missing from artificial tooth implants. The next step is to transplant these so-called 'bio-teeth' back into human mouths and see if they grow into something that we can chew on—or rather, with."
They wash them (Score:5, Funny)
No need to worry about how gross that sounds, they wash them before putting them in, using a special sterilizing soap grown from a rat's testicles.
Re:They wash them (Score:4, Funny)
Nicholson [pointing a gun at DiCaprio]: I taste a rat!
DiCaprio: Those are you're new implants, boss!
Nicholson [putting gun away]: Oh yeah. It's going to take some time to get used to these...
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Sorry, but he is NOT myre moron!
Re:They wash them (Score:5, Informative)
YOU'RE totally right; my mistake. I noticed the error after I had already posted, but of course by then it was too late to change it. English grammar has never been a strength of mine, although I usually do OK all things considered (French is my primary language). The choice between your/you're and its/it's has always required a conscious decision on my part and does not come naturally to me, and in my rush to post the comment earlier I made that terrible mistake. Sorry that you were so offended by it that you felt the need to reach out and personally attack me. I'll try to be more considerate of your sensitivities in the future...
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Please ignore those Americans who forget there are other languages spoken in the world and that, typically, those other-language speakers actually know English quite well...
(I am on a teleconference right now with some French Canadians and Danes... all speaking English...)
- A non-offended American. :P :)
Vagina Dentata (Score:2)
Vagina Dentata! What a wonderful phrase
Vagina DentataI Ain't no passing craze
It means no worries for the rest of your days
It's our problem-free philosophy
Vagina Dentata!
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Depends on whether or not you're the owner of the vagina dentata... I'm guessing an OB/GYN doing a pelvic or even worse, an anxious Lothario is going to sweat those dentata a whole lot.
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The only rule in English is there are no rules. We specifically designed it that way to infuriate the French. Whatever “rule” you think you’re following, 50% of the world’s English speakers do it the other way. In half the world’s schools they teach you that “my friend and I” is incorrect, and in the other half, they teach you that “me and my friend” is incorrect. Half the words in English are adopted from other languages — even American.
No rules m
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Problem is after inserting them you have a craving for cheese.
Craving for cheese is perfectly normal. Squeak. (Score:2)
And so is dressing and acting as a mouse. Squeak. [youtube.com]
How do rat's pass that? (Score:3, Insightful)
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I'd imagine after getting these teeth added, one would develop a new fondness for cheese...
Really, a fake tooth is fine, thanks (Score:4, Funny)
As tempting as putting something in my mouth grown from a mouse's kidney sounds, I'll just take a crown or some bridgework, thanks.
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A predator that has no problem eating meat? What a concept!
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Yeah they'd probably try going it in your own kidneys for better rejection prevention. :P
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As gross as this sounds, dental implants sound much worse. They drill a hole in your jaw and put in a giant screw. Hopefully they put it in right. Here at least it is a real tooth, grown from a piece of your own gums.
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I had a dentist who wanted to replace a missing tooth with a cadaver tooth. I told him there was zero chance that I was going to let him implant a dead person's tooth in my mouth.
In that case, pray that you'll never need an organ transplant in your life. (Although in this case, it seems weird that a randomly chosen human tooth would be properly sized. They take classes for just that, how to make the artificial stuff properly sized so that it would fit.)
They've got this backwards. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Maybe the universe would collapse if you tried to grow a kidney in a kidney.
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Maybe the universe would collapse if you tried to grow a kidney in a kidney.
You can grow anything in anything! Welcome to the fractal people universe [wikipedia.org]...it's Mandelbrot all way down!
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They tried, but the mouse exploded.
Re:They've got this backwards. (Score:5, Insightful)
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They would find it much more lucrative if they could figure out a way to grow replacement KIDNEYS.
But imagine the size of a kidney grown inside a mouse tooth, they'd have to stitch together thousands to get anything useful!
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That has already been done.
Anthony Atala: Printing a human kidney | Video on TED.com
http://www.ted.com/talks/anthony_atala_printing_a_human_kidney.html
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Anthony Atala: Printing a human kidney | Video on TED.com [ted.com]
So-called (Score:1)
So-called "bio-teeth" ...as opposed to WHAT?
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So-called "bio-teeth" ...as opposed to WHAT?
Porcelain?
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It sounds good but (Score:5, Funny)
Why not just grow it in our mouth. (Score:4, Interesting)
So they take tissue out of your mouth, put it in a mouse, then grow the tooth. Why not just grow the tooth in your own mouth?
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Because the developing tooth is far too fragile, I assume. It'd be squished the moment you chewed anything. Or poked it with your tongue.
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I've already grown two sets of teeth in my mouth! Seems plausible...
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The process of moving the tooth from jaw to mouth is rather painful, even in children - where the teeth are ready to come out anyway.
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You must be one of the lucky ones whose wisdom teeth erupted in the right direction.
When they come out the side of your gums, hoo boy. "Painful" doesn't even begin to cover it.
Re:Why not just grow it in our mouth. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why not just grow it in our mouth. (Score:5, Funny)
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I don't know...maybe it's just me, but teeth growing out of my kidney sounds like something gone horribly, horribly wrong...
Kidney stones. With a vengeance!
Poor mousey.
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Because it's a lot harder to get approval for an animal trial than a human trial? Especially when said trial involves injecting things into your molars? And for a more science centric reason, it maybe be that the environment of the kidneys is essentially to the actual regrowing teeth part.
Actually, they did (Score:3)
Funny enough, they did do just that a couple years ago. Doesn't seem like anything came from it.
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-05/new-technique-uses-bodys-stem-cells-regenerate-teeth [popsci.com]
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Yeah, I just figure that by the time I get to that point, they'll have nanotech or something that can just go in there and build new superteeth in a couple hours.
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It didn't sound expensive enough so they had to add complexity.
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Grow it in your ovary. (Score:2, Informative)
My wife has a "Dermoid Cyst", which is a benign tumor on one of her ovaries. It's filled with skin, hair, and teeth. That's right. Fully developed adult human teeth. Molars, actually. Often they're discovered when the teeth show up on an abdominal x-ray.
It's simultaneously very fascinating and very creepy. Google image search for "dermoid cyst". The human body is a weird thing.
Re:Grow it in your ovary. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Oh come on, you KNOW you are just BEGGING for a "Fetus in fetu" type teratoma to show up on your high resolution gaming monitor, in spectacular color and detail.
It's the perfect chaser to googling a dermatoid cyst for images.
You'll never feel quite the same again once you learn they often grow from pluripotent stemcells making their way into improper places.
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Not that I am one, but surely an M.D. would need to be able to tolerate the appearance.
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Man that was evil, you should know that advising people NOT to search for those images would make them do the exact opposite!!
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Presumably that would _hurt_. Have you ever seen how much agony a teething baby is in?
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This.
Though I suspect this is a first step towards that goal.
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Because they couldn't?
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Because something in the mouse is stimulating the tooth to grow. In your own adult mouth, there is nothing that will stimulate a new tooth to grow from scratch. Ideally, someone would develop a method to grow a tooth in your own mouth, but that's another step away from this.
That's one hell of a kidney stone (Score:1)
Sucks to be that rat when it comes time to harvest those teeth...
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Finally, we caught up to Sharks (Score:2)
Now, NOTHING can stand against us!
Crown us King of the Earth and the SEAS!
P.S. I already know humans kill more sharks than sharks kill humans. But darn it, they smiled too much when we kill them. Now we can do it BACK.
But do the mice then... (Score:3)
bite the hand that feeds them?
Difficulties (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Difficulties (Score:4, Informative)
Agreed, the perfect solution is the one that generates teeth already.
The issue with fibroblasts in adult human tissue, is that they don't form a blastema upon "injury". (unless you are a reptile, or certain kinds of fish.) I mention fibroblasts, because they are the creators and components of the extracellular matrix, which helps undifferentiated cells to understand where in the host they have found themselves.
In mammals, fibroblasts "regenerate" damage as scar tissue, instead of forming the blastema. In regenerating lizards and the like, they form this structure, which essentially regrows the missing or damaged tissue using stemcells from the host's blood supply, which migrate to the blastema, attach, then begin regrowing the damaged or amputated feature following the embryonic blueprint, using HOX gene activation of the supporting fibroblast matrix as a signpost.
The ideal solution, would be to collect a sample of tissue from a recently extracted diseased molar, culture it in a petri dish, and use a chemical cocktail to force it to become a blastema, which would then be reinserted into the jaw later. This ensures proper HOX activation for the site from the tissue culture, which helps ensure that the resulting tissue from the blastema will not only be a tooth, but also the CORRECT tooth.
It is important to note that the location in the body from which the fibroblasts harvested to create these blastema is critical in determining "what" will grow. Several experiments were performed on salamanders, where a lesion was purposefully created, then the blastema translocated to a different location on the host surgically. The result was the induction of grown limbs in inappropriate places, (such as tails and legs in the middle of the back), at the sites of translocation. Once the blastema has formed, it has already begun the developmental program for what will be produced. It is believed this is due to the activation state of bodyplan HOX genes in the fibroblasts involved in the blastema's creation, according to several gene expression assays performed.
This means that the tooth formed by a dental blastema would be highly dependent upon where in the mouth the cell culture was taken, and the presence of scar tissue being extent or not. It would be a very good idea to write down that information when taking your samples for culture, and not mixing the samples up on implantation. :D
It is personal conjecture time, but personally, I think that a cultured then frozen blastema could be later reintroduced as a grown tooth bud after the bone tissue has healed in the extraction channel, and after the in vitro blastema has had sufficient time to decide which way it will make its root structure, to reduce the risks of "serious complication", which needless to say, would require very invasive surgery to correct, as well as for it to develop diagnostic criteria for ensuring proper orientation and clocking for insertion. (The transplanted tissue bud would be about the size of a grain of milo, or smaller at this stage of development. Just enough to know which way it is pointed, and to get some diagnostic data for proper insertion from.) This way the introduced blastema would grow and integrate with the jaw in the appropriate fashion, though it would be a good idea to monitor its growth to ensure it was properly inserted, and is not going to cause an impaction later. (Somehow I doubt most insurance would cover the added expenses over that of a prosthetic device though, and they bitch enough about those. As such, I dont see this happening any time soon, but I don't see a major obstacle against it biologically/technologically. Bureaucratically is another issue entirely!)
Even if the resulting dental crown is abnormal, this at least produces a healthy root structure, (at least in theory), which would allow surgical correction with more traditional techniques, as required.
Naturally, this process needs to be performed in animals many times to work out all the risks of complicat
Calm Down Al... (Score:2)
Calm Down Al... drink your warm spider milk [slashdot.org]. It will help calm your nerves.
A matter of taste (Score:2)
Would the teeth be considered less disgusting if they were grown in a cow's buttocks? Besides, plenty of people in western culture eat kidneys already. Your steak and kidney pie will probably taste better coming off of a fork with teeth than coming out of a straw.
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One caveat: cancer. (Score:1)
They're still using stem cells. It would be much greater to find the solution or protein that triggers your body to just produce a new set of teeth.
The end of the article source is pretty depressing. 10-15 years away from human trials. They said that 10-15 years ago. I've been watching this research for a long time, as I was one of those kids that lived on mt. Dew soda. Ugh! I was particularly excited when they released a treatment for gum tissue repair this year. [sciencedaily.com]
Captcha: puppies
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The end of the article source is pretty depressing. 10-15 years away from human trials. They said that 10-15 years ago.
Longer. I've been reading reports a bit this kind of research every couple of years for at least 20 years. And now every year or two I have to have a root canal, and/or crown, or just extraction. My time is running out before I end up like my father with full dentures.
What happend to LIPUS? (Score:2)
I guess the same thing that happened to the techniques to restore your eyesight.
Never trust a person who makes a living off of you staying sick and helpless.
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AFAICT, the LIPUS stuff got run through the science-to-media translation matrix and overhyped, as usual.
The "grow new teeth" thing was the result of a study (by Dr. Tarek El-Bialy at the University of Alberta) of it in rabbits, who already have continuously-growing teeth, so presumably provoking the growth of new teeth is a relatively simple task.
In humans, it seems to be mostly useful as a potential treatment for root resorption or to supplement stem cell-based regrowth.
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...besides the fact that it would put every single dentist out of work.
No it wouldn't. Someone has got to perform the procedure, might just as well be a dentist. Besides, it wouldn't exactly fix the problems of crooked, impacted, or malformed teeth, so even with this technology, there will still be a need for qualified dentists.
Just imagine the mouse passing the tooth (Score:2)
PETA should be all over this! Imagine passing a molar through your tiny mouse urethra!
That awkward moment... (Score:2)
When you realize you're not reading an "April Fools'" headline... Seriously, this looks like a story you'd see on The Onion, not SienceMag. We live in interesting times, indeed.
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cosmetic teeth (Score:1)
Because why not? (Score:2)
Human teeth from mouse kidneys. Because why the hell not? Next week, we'll start on our project to make alligator spleens from parrot intestines. Time permitting, there's always the cheetah-bones-from-elephant-skin plan or the one where we make dog fur from jellyfish stingers. If we get enough funding, we might be able to complete our magnum opus, recreating the heart of a triceratops from the colon of a neanderthal!
Yeeaaoowch! (Score:2)
What a painful stone that would be to pass.
"Has anyone seen my teeth?" (Score:2)
"Relax, grandpa, they're right here in these mice kidneys. Just try to remember not to soak the mice in Efferdent overnight. This one's still foaming at the mouth."
Horrible horrible error (Score:2)
Wasn't this done minus the mice? (Score:2)
Did this not pan out or something?
NICE! been wondering about this for years (Score:1)