Japanese Scientists Develop Groundbreaking Drug That Grows New Teeth
Dr. Katsu Takahashi, lead researcher, co-founder of Toregem Biopharma, and head of dentistry and oral surgery at the Medical Research Institute Kitano Hospital in Osaka, Japan, has been working on how to induce the growth of new teeth his entire career.
The antibody-based drug targets a protein that inhibits the growth of new teeth from “tooth buds,” and in previous animal experiments, the drug induced the growth of a “third generation” of teeth, in addition to baby teeth and permanent adult teeth.
While sharks and many reptiles have teeth that are continually replaced, and crocodiles replace their teeth more than 40 times throughout their lifetimes, mammals don't have the same unlimited tooth-replacing abilities. Until recently, it was assumed that humans had only two sets of teeth. However, there is evidence that humans also possess these tooth buds, which have the potential to become a third set of teeth.
The drug has been used successfully to grow new teeth in mice and ferrets, with clinical trials expected to begin in humans in July 2024 to test the drug’s safety in healthy adults.
In 2018, Dr. Takahashi and his team gave the drug to ferrets, which, like humans, have tooth buds, baby teeth, and permanent adult teeth—and new teeth grew.
The new drug could solve the problem of tooth agenesis, which is the failure of all or part of an organ to grow during fetal development. Tooth agenesis is the absence of one or more permanent teeth. Oligodontia is the absence of six or more teeth (not including third molars), and anodontia is the complete absence of teeth.
Anodontia is a congenital disorder that affects about 1 percent of the population.
Children born with tooth agenesis have trouble with basic activities such as eating and speaking, which can undermine their development. Until now, treatments have focused on replacing the missing teeth with dentures, bridges, and implants.
How the Drug Works
In the early 1990s, scientists began isolating genes that, when removed, caused mice to grow fewer teeth, and researchers found that the number of teeth that grew varied by manipulating just one gene.In 2005, Dr. Takahashi returned to Japan from studying in the United States. He and his team at Kyoto University began research based on the discovery of the genes that specifically affect tooth growth. They found that mice missing a particular gene had more teeth and that a protein, called USAG-1, which was synthesized by the gene, decreased the number of teeth that grew. They theorized that blocking the USAG-1 protein would stimulate the growth of more teeth. They were right.
Final Thoughts
The implications of such a drug could be significant given that dental problems—and tooth loss in particular—affect billions of people worldwide, including the about 41 million Americans who have dentures, according to 2020 U.S. Census data and Simmons National Consumer Survey. That's about 12 percent of the population.Should the drug prove safe and effective, millions of people worldwide who suffer from a wide range of dental conditions—especially children with congenital disorders—may soon be able to have their teeth grow and develop naturally.
Dr. Takahashi said that he and his team hope to bring the drug to market by 2030.
Reposted from: https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/japanese-scientists-develop-groundbreaking-drug-that-grows-new-teeth-5507318
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