“…Although their gross anatomy can vary dramatically across species, the complex serous-mucous liquid produced (saliva) plays an important and often essential role in survival through its impact on diet, for example, mice die within days after major gland removal. Although functional salivary glands are not required for human survival, SG dysfunction that arises from genetic anomalies (e.g., LADD or ASLG syndromes), or damage from surgery, therapeutic radiation for head and neck cancer (Frank et al , 1965; Valdez et al , 1993), or autoimmune diseases such as Sjögren’s syndrome (Azuma et al , 1997; Patel and Shahane, 2014; Stewart et al , 2008) impairs oral health, resulting in a myriad of symptoms including mastication and swallowing difficulties (Dusek et al , 1996; Hamlet et al , 1997; Tolentino Ede et al , 2011), speech impairment (Rhodus et al , 1995), mucosal alterations, oral infection (Azizi and Rezaei, 2009; Brown et al , 1975; Davies et al , 2006) and accelerated tooth decay (Lu et al , 2014). Despite these detrimental and life-long effects, current therapies are limited to secretagogues and artificial saliva, with no long-term solutions to restore salivary gland function.…”