The cement produced microcrystals of calcite by reaction with culture medium supplemented with calf serum. Human dental pulp cells seeded on such a substrate preferentially adhered and aggregated around the microcrystals. Immunofluorescence and immunogold labelling revealed a high affinity of serum fibronectin molecules for the calcite crystals. At 4 weeks in culture, the cells had various features of differentiated odontoblasts, notably nuclear polarization, typical appearance of the Golgi apparatus, synthesis of type I collagen and absence of type III, and apical accumulation of actin and vimentin. These cells also elaborated a collagenous extracellular matrix which did not mineralize.