ARTÍCULO
Adipokines in dental pulp: physiological, pathological, and potential therapeutic roles
Fecha
2021Registro en:
1349-0079, e 1880-3865
10.1016/j.job.2021.11.002
Autor
Alvarez Vasquez, Jose Luis
Intriago Morales, Ruth Viviana
Bravo Guapisaca, Maria Isabel
Gavidia Pazmiño, Jonathan Francisco
Institución
Resumen
Background: Hundreds of adipokines have been identified, and their extensive range of endocrine functions- regulating distant organs such as oral tissues- and local autocrine/paracrine roles have been studied. In dentistry, however, adipokines are poorly known proteins in the dental pulp; few of them have been studied despite their large number. This study reviews recent advances in the investigation of dental-pulp adipokines, with an emphasis on their roles in inflammatory processes and their potential
therapeutic applications.
Highlights: The most recently identified adipokines in dental pulp include leptin, adiponectin, resistin, ghrelin, oncostatin, chemerin, and visfatin. They have numerous physiological and pathological functions in the pulp tissue: they are closely related to pulp inflammatory mechanisms and actively participate in cell differentiation, mineralization, angiogenesis, and immune-system modulation.
Conclusion: Adipokines have potential clinical applications in regenerative endodontics and as biomarkers or targets for the pharmacological management of inflammatory and degenerative processes in dental pulp. A promising direction for the development of new therapies may be the use of agonists/antagonists to modulate the expression of the most studied adipokines.