Cell Tissue Res (1986) 244: 133-140
Cell
and Tissue
Research
© Springer-Verlag 1986
Type-I collagen production by human odontoblast-like cells
in explants cultured on cyanoacrylate films
Electron-immunolocalization of fibronectin at cell/film interface
H. Magloire 1, A. Callé 1, D.J. Hartmann 2, A. Joffre 1, B. Serre 3, J.A. Grimaud“, and F. Schué3
1 Laboratoire d’Histophysiologie et de Pathologie des Tissus Dentaires. U.A. CNRS 819; Faculté d’Odontologie,
Lyon and C.M.E.A.B.G.; Faculté des Sciences, Villeurbanne, France;
2 Centre de Radioanalyse, U.A. CNRS 819, Institut Pasteur, Lyon, France;
3 Laboratoire de Chimie Macromoléculaire, Université des Sciences et des Techniques, Montpellier, France;
4 Laboratoire de Pathologie Cellulaire du Foie, U.A. CNRS 819, Institut Pasteur, Lyon, France
Summary. Odontoblast-like cells derived from human tooth
pulps were maintained in explant culture and grown either
on glass coverslips only (used as control) or on glass covers-
lips coated with cyanoacrylate films. Ultrastructural and
cyto-morphometric evidence showed that cells exposed to
cyanoacrylate, in contrast to controls, display a significant
decrease of rough endoplasmic reticulum and mitochon-
dria. In addition, immunofluorescent staining and radioim-
munoassays for type-I collagen suggested disturbances in
production for the exposed cells. The use of anti-fibronectin
antibodies with electron—microscopic immunoperoxidase-
labelling demonstrated that the adherence of cells to cyano-
acrylate can involve both adhesion plaques and fibronectin.
These results therefore suggest that there were no apparent
differences in the adhesion interaction of cells between glass
and cyanoacrylate substrates.
Key words: Collagen — Odontoblast — Cyanoacrylate — Fi-
bronectin — Human
The treatment of dental carious lesions, i.e., the treatment
of the adjacent pulpal inflammation, involves a variety of
operative procedures and dental restorative materials. Thus,
a careful removal of the injured dentine is followed by endo-
dontic therapy if the exposure of the pulpal connective tis-
sue is evident. If an exposure is not evident, the tooth should
be restored with materials having a low degree of toxicity
and which allow the pulp to heal without further damage
(Taintor et al. 1981). Thus, alpha-alkyl-cyanoacrylates
(methyl, ethyl, butyl, hexyl, octyl, decyl) were widely tested
for intra-oral surgery as well as adhesives or pulp capping
in restorative dentistry (for review see: Bhaskar et al. 1972;
Mc Graw and Caffesse 1978; Hashida et al. 1981).
Tissue response to higher homologues of methyl-2-cya-
noacrylate (the first adhesive introduced but the most toxic)
frequently comprises a foreign body reaction, indicating
that alpha cyanoacrylates could be clinically valuable. In
vitro application of isobutyl—cyanoacrylate to mouse fibro-
blasts (de Renzis and Aleo 1970) or cells grown from sali-
vary gland explants (Lamey et al. 1981) have demonstrated
the absence of signs of toxicity, ethyl-alpha—cyanoacrylate
Send offprint requests to : Prof. H. Magloire, Faculté d’Odontolo-
gie, rue G. Paradin, 69372 Lyon Cedcx 2, France
even enhancing the cell adhesion to glass. In addition, equal
growth occurred when cultured on glass or cyanoacrylate
substrates.
However, no information is available concerning the
ability of cultured odontoblast-like cells grown on n-butyl
or n-hexyl alpha cyanoacrylate films to elaborate a collage-
nous matrix. In normal conditions, when such cells are
grown directly on glass coverslips, they mostly produce type
I collagen (Magloire et al. 1981) and exhibit numerous fea-
tures similar to those found in young secretory odontoblasts
in vivo (Magloire and Dumont 1976; Magloire and Joffre
1979), the only cells responsible for the synthesis of dentinal
collagen (mainly consisting of type-I collagen fibres (Scott
et al. 1976; Magloire et al. 1983b). This paper describes
the ultrastructure of odontoblast-like cells cultured on cya-
noacrylate films and correlates production of type-I colla-
gen by immunofiuorescence on the cell layer using specific
anti-type-I collagen antibodies and competition radioimmu-
noassay for type-I collagen released into the culture medi-
um. In addition, the presence of fibronectin at the cell/
cyanoacrylate interface was investigated because of the in-
volvement of this major glycoprotein in processes of adhe-
sion to biological or artificial surfaces (Y amada and Olden
1978; Grinnell 1978; Hedman et al. 1978; Grinnell and
Bennett 1981; Kleinman et al. 1981; Ruoslahti et al. 1981).
Preliminary reports have been described previously (Mag-
loire et al. 1983a).
Materials and methods
Monomer preparation
The monomer was prepared by reacting paraformaldehyde
and n-alkyl-cyanoacetate in a mixture of methanol and dig-
Iyme using piperidine as catalyst according to the method
described by Leonard et al. (1966). As the monomer poly-
merized instantaneously as it formed, due to the presence
of water and piperidine, leading to low molecular weight
chains, a thermal depolymerization treatment at a tempera-
ture of 150° C to 190° C was necessary to obtain the
monomer. Water was removed from the reaction mixture
before the depolymerization step by azeotropic distillation
with benzene. The depolymerization was conducted in vacu-
um using sulphur dioxide as an inhibitor to prevent anionic
polymerization. Moreover, phosphorus pentoxide and hy-
134
droquinone were introduced into the receiver flask to re-
move water and to prevent free-radical polymerization re-
spectively. The pure monomer was obtained after redistilla-
tion under a reduced pressure of nitrogen using propane
sultone in the receiver flask as anionic polymerization inhib-
itor. It was stored frozen under dry nitrogen before use.
Tissue culture
Explant cultures, obtained from children’s permanent tooth
germs removed for orthodontic reasons, were grown on
glass coverslips for control cultures or on glass coverslips
coated with n-butyl or n-hexyl alpha cyanoacrylate pre-
pared as described above. The preparations were sterilized
with ultraviolet light, suspended in Eagle basal medium
(BME, Biomérieux, France) supplemented with 10% foetal
calf serum (KC Biological, Lenexa, Kansas, USA), ascorbic
acid, penicillin and streptomycin as described previously
(Magloire and Dumont 1976). The cultures (cyanoacrylate-
exposed and control) were incubated for two weeks at
37° C, the medium being renewed every 3-4 days. Growth
was considered to have occurred if cellular outgrowth from
the explant was seen under the inverted microscope.
Electron microscopy
Each culture was fixed in a solution (pH 7.4) containing
2% glutaraldehyde and 0.15 M sodium cacodylate for five
minutes at room temperature. After three rinses in sodium
cacodylate (0.2 M; pH 7.4), the cultures were post-fixed in
2% aqueous osmium tetroxide, dehydrated in a graded se-
ries of ethanol concentrations and embedded in Epon. The
samples, sectioned perpendicular to their plane of growth
were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate before
examination with a Philips 300 electron microscope.
Cytomorphometric procedures
For the analysis of surface areas of mitochondria and rough
endoplasmic reticulum (rER) from cyanoacrylate-exposed
(20 blocks) or control cells grown on glass (20 blocks), ap-
proximately 300 ultrathin sections were systematically sur-
veyed in an electron microscope. Every area containing cells
in close contact with the cyanoacrylate film or in an equiva-
lent situation for control specimens was photographed at
x 20000 and enlarged photographically to x 40000. From
a pool of several hundred electron micrographs, ten cells
from each group (cyanoacrylate—exposed or control cul-
tures) were randomly selected to cytomorphometric analysis
(Weibel 1979). Each selected electron micrograph was cov-
ered by a transparency on which the cell and nucleus periph-
ery, the perimeter of rough endoplasmic reticulum (rER)
and mitochondria (mit.) could be marked. Then, a quanti-
met 900 (Cambridge Instruments) video digital image ana-
lyser connected to a computer programmed for surface area
measurements expressed as umz, was used. For each se-
lected cell, the surface area of rough endoplasmic reticulum
(SrER) or mitochondria (S mit.) relative to the cytoplasm
cell surface was estimated by:
_ S rER or S mit.
— S cell — S nucleus
These data were expressed as meani-standard deviation
of the mean (SD). Differences were assessed by Student’s
t—test; p