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1.
The localization of collagens types I, II, III, IV, laminin, and fibronectin was analyzed in mouse embryonic molars by indirect immunofluorescence. Using affinity-purified antibodies, all these antigens except collagen type II were detected in tooth germs and particularly at the epithelio-mesenchymal junction. Collagens type I, type IV, and laminin were localized at the junction before, during, and after odontoblasts terminal differentiation. The staining patterns corresponding to type III collagen and fibronectin were modified during the polarization of odontoblasts. Collagen type III present at the epithelio-mesenchymal junction could no longer be detected in this region when odontoblasts were polarized. Fibronectin, surrounding preodontoblasts, was confined to the epithelio-mesenchymal junction when odontoblasts were fully polarized. Previous studies had shown that the presence of a basement membrane and associated material was a prerequisite for the polarization of odontoblasts. Therefore, the redistribution of collagen type III and fibronectin was discussed in terms of fibronectin-collagen interactions and transmembranous control of the cytoskeleton activity in the differentiating odontoblasts.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract. The nature, amounts, and distribution of glycos-aminoglycans (GAG) before and during odontoblast terminal differentiation were studied. GAG have been isolated from intact mouse tooth germs and from dissociated dental epithelia and dental papillae after labeling with [3H] glucos-amine or 35SO42− as precursor. The kinds and relative amounts of 3H-labeled GAG were analyzed by chromatography on a DEAE-cellulose column and cellulose thin-layer sheets. The amounts of individual GAG relative to total GAG were determined from the elution profiles, whereas their nature was identified by the selective removal of chromatographic peaks after enzymatic or chemical degradation. We found hyaluronate and probably a minute quantity of heparan sulfate in the dental epithelium, while hyaluronate, heparan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate were the main types of GAG in the dental papilla. The chondroitin sulfate recovered was further fractionated by cellulose thin-layer chromatography into two isomers, namely chondroitin-4-sulfate (the major component) and chondroitin-6-sulfate. Changes in the elution profile from DEAE-cellulose chromatography of tooth GAG extracted from different developmental stages suggest that modifications of GAG occur during odontogenesis. Alcian blue staining localized large amounts of hyaluronate and sulfated GAG along the epithelio-mesenchymal junction. Tissue specificity and changing patterns of GAG were demonstrated during odontogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
The mesenchymal cells of the developing tooth differentiate into odontoblasts as a result of an epithelio-mesenchymal interaction. Odontoblast differentiation was studied in vitro by cultivating dental mesenchyme and epithelium with interposed filters. Separation of the two components by enzyme treatment resulted in removal of the basement membrane. When the epithelium was grown alone, or transfilter from killed lens capsule, the basement membrane was not restored. Transfilter cultivation with dental mesenchyme resulted in basement membrane formation, but only if the filter pores allowed penetration of cytoplasmic processes. Hence, a close association between the epithelial and the mesenchymal cells seems to be a prerequisite for the restoration of the basement membrane. Differentiation of odontoblasts took place only in explants in which a basement membrane was formed. Differentiation did not occur when contact of the mesenchymal cells with the basement membrane was prevented by small pore size filters. Further experiments demonstrating an intact basement membrane suggested that membrane contacts between the epithelial and the mesenchymal cells are not needed for odontoblast differentiation. Hence, we suggest that differentiation of odontoblasts is triggered via contact of the mesenchymal cells with the basement membrane.  相似文献   

4.
A non-collagenous protein, extracted from rat incisor dentin, is a dentin sialoprotein (DSP). We examined immunohistochemically the developmental appearance and tissue distribution of DSP in 1 to 3-day-old rat molar and incisor tooth germs. The earliest staining for DSP was observed in newly differentiated odontoblasts. In more advanced stages, immunostaining for DSP gradually increased in pre-dentin, odontoblasts and dentin, and appeared in many cells of the dental papilla. In early stages of development before the breakdown of the dental basement membrane, pre-ameloblasts were also positive for DSP. This staining disappeared from the ameloblast cell body soon after deposition of the first layer of mineralized dentin. Radiolabelling of tooth matrix proteins with 14C-serine in vitro followed by immunoprecipitation and fluorography confirmed that DSP was synthesized by tooth-forming cells. The immunolocalization for DSP was different from that of either collagen type-I, osteocalcin or the amelogenins. Whereas collagen type-I and osteocalcin were restricted to the mesenchymal dental tissues, the amelogenins were detectable in both epithelial and mesenchymal dental cells and tissues at the epithelio-mesenchymal interface at early stages of development, prior to the onset of dentin mineralization. We conclude that DSP is expressed in and secreted by odontoblasts and some dental papilla cells from early stages of dentinogenesis onwards, i.e. later than type-I collagen, but before deposition of the first layer of mineralized dentin. In pre-mineralizing stages, some of the matrix proteins may be endocytosed from the pre-dentin by both cell types involved in the epithelio-mesenchymal interaction.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Matrix-mediated epithelio-mesenchymal interactions play a crucial role in the control of dental cytodifferentiations. Ultrastructural observation of the epithelio-mesenchymal junction in cultured embryonic mouse molars showed discrete zones with duplicated or multilayered basal laminae. The use of synthetic peptides demonstrated that the process was RGD*-independent, did not involve the YIGSR* sequence present on laminin and could occur spontaneously. Cultured incisors showed a similar but much more dramatic multiplication of the basal lamina. Furthermore, the deposition of multilayered basal laminae was specific for the labial aspect of the tooth and could be detected after 6 h of culture. Despite these alterations, preodontoblasts differentiated and gradients of differentiation were maintained, suggesting that among basement membrane constituents, the basal lamina itself does not play a critical role. More important is the inner dental epithelium which may still control odontoblast differentiation by means of diffusible molecules able to reach surface receptors expressed by preodontoblasts or matrix receptors underlying the basal lamina. Gradients of odontoblast differentiation could result from a progressive acquisition of competence by preodontoblasts.  相似文献   

7.
Facts and Hypotheses Concerning the Control of Odontoblast Differentiation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Numerous studies using amphibians have demonstrated that preodontoblasts emerging from the dental papilla are derived from cranial neural crest cells [4, 12, 46, 64]. However this has not been established for mammals. The history of odontogenesis begins during the early stages of cranial-facial development when the maxillary and mandibular processes develop. Continuous epithelio-mesenchymal interactions condition the histogenesis and morphogenesis of the teeth [24–26, 43, 44, 49, 51,58] as well as the terminal differentiation of odontoblasts and ameloblasts [23, 47, 52, 54, 59, 61, 67].
During recent years a considerable amount of experimental data relating to differentiation of odontoblasts has been published. We summarize these data and attempt to integrate them in deductive hypotheses concerning the control of odontoblast differentiation.  相似文献   

8.
The distribution of the matrix protein fibronectin was studied by indirect immunofluorescence in differentiating mouse molars from bud stage to the stage of dentin and enamel secretion, and compared to that of collagenous proteins procollagen type III and collagen type I. Fibronectin was seen in mesenchymal tissue, basement membranes, and predentin. The dental mesenchyme lost fibronectin staining when differentiating into odontoblasts. Fibronectin was not detected in mineralized dentin. Epithelial tissues were negative except for the stellate reticulum within the enamel organ. Particularly intense staining was seen at the epithelio-mesenchymal interface between the dental epithelium and mesenchyme. Fibronectin may here be involved in anchorage of the mesenchymal cells during their differentiation into odontoblasts. Procollagen type III was lost from the dental mesenchyme during odontoblast differentiation but reappeared with advancing vascularization of the dental papilla. Similarly, procollagen type III present in the dental basement membrane during the bud and cap stages disappeared from the cuspal area along with odontoblast differentiation. Weak staining was seen in predentin but not in mineralized dentin. The staining with anti-collagen type I antibodies was weak in dental mesenchyme but intense in predentin as well as in mineralized dentin.  相似文献   

9.
Changes in the distribution of tenascin during tooth development   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Tenascin is an extracellular matrix molecule that was earlier shown to be enriched in embryonic mesenchyme surrounding the budding epithelium in various organs including the tooth. In the present study tenascin was localized by immunohistology throughout the course of tooth development in the mouse and rat using polyclonal antibodies against chick tenascin. The results indicate that tenascin is expressed by the lineage of dental mesenchymal cells throughout tooth ontogeny. The intensity of staining with tenascin antibodies in the dental papilla mesenchyme was temporarily reduced at cap stage when the tooth grows rapidly and undergoes extensive morphogenetic changes. During the bell stage of morphogenesis, the staining intensity increased and tenascin was accumulated in the dental pulp even after completion of crown development and eruption. Tenascin was present in the dental basement membrane at the time of odontoblast differentiation. The dental papilla cells ceased to express tenascin upon differentiation into odontoblasts and tenascin was completely absent from dentin. It can be speculated that the remarkable expression of tenascin in the dental mesenchymal cells as compared to other connective tissues is associated with their capacity to differentiate into hard-tissue-forming cells.  相似文献   

10.
The distribution and synthesis of type I and type III collagens in the mouse molar tooth root have been investigated by correlating light and electron immunohistochemical data. Purified rabbit antibodies were raised against mouse type I and type III collagens and indirect immunoperoxidase procedures were used. In these conditions, predentin, pre-bone, and pre-acellular cementum were intensely immunostained for type I collagen. Both optic and ultrastructural data confirmed the presence of type I collagen at the epithelio-mesenchymal junction, but Hertwig's basement membranes remained unlabelled. The odontoblasts including the short polarized ones, osteoblasts, some cells of pulp mesenchyme and the perifollicular cells possessed type I collagen immunoreactivity in the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), Golgi complex and the secretory vesicles. Type III collagen immunoreactivity was strong in the perifollicular mesenchyme, light in the pulp mesenchyme and absent from the epithelio-mesenchymal junction, the predentin, pre-bone and pre-acellular cementum. Intracellular immunolabelling was detected at the ultrastructural level in the perifollicular cells by a faint homogeneous peroxidase deposit in the RER cisternae. Finally, these results, compared with previous biochemical and morphological data, represent the first dynamic aspect of collagens distribution and synthesis in the mouse molar root development. In terms of cell differentiation, our data also suggest that type III collagen synthesis does not occur during the odontoblast process of differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The distribution and synthesis of type I and type III collagens in the mouse molar tooth root have been investigated by correlating light and electron immunohistochemical data. Purified rabbit antibodies were raised against mouse type I and type III collagens and indirect immunoperoxidase procedures were used. In these conditions, predentin, pre-bone, and pre-acellular cementum were intensely immunostained for type I collagen. Both optic and ultrastructural data confirmed the presence of type I collagen at the epithelio-mesenchymal junction, but Hertwig's basement membranes remained unlabelled. The odontoblasts including the short polarized ones, osteoblasts, some cells of pulp mesenchyme and the perifollicular cells possessed type I collagen immunoreactivity in the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), Golgi complex and the secretory vesicles.Type III collagen immunoreactivity was strong in the perifollicular mesenchyme, light in the pulp mesenchyme and absent from the epithelio-mesenchymal junction, the predentin, pre-bone and pre-acellular cementum. Intracellular immunolabelling was detected at the ultrastructural level in the perifollicular cells by a faint homogeneous peroxidase deposit in the RER cisternae.Finally, these results, compared with previous biochemical and morphological data, represent the first dynamic aspect of collagens distribution and synthesis in the mouse molar root development. In terms of cell differentiation, our data also suggest that type III collagen synthesis does not occur during the odontoblast process of differentiation.  相似文献   

12.
Sulfation and desulfation of total glycosaminoglycans (GAG) as well as of chondroitin sulfates (A + C), dermatan sulfate, and heparan sulfate were quantified in the developing cerebrum and cerebellum of mice by labeling with [35S]sulfate combined with chases started 24 hr after [35S]sulfate injection. In both the developing cerebrum and cerebellum, the rate of biosynthesis of total sulfated GAG was highest shortly after birth (2 days), decreased sharply thereafter, and reached a plateau after 14 days. The biosynthetic activities of chondroitin sulfates and heparan sulfate decreased sharply up to 14 days and retained constant levels afterward. By contrast, the rates of biosynthesis of dermatan sulfate increased up to 14 days. The biodegradation rates of total sulfated GAG as well as of chondroitin sulfates, heparan sulfate, and dermatan sulfate were strongly correlated with the corresponding rates of biosynthesis during the first 2 postnatal weeks. Total and individual sulfated GAG showed high degradation rates resulting in half-life times of a few hours up to 1 1/2 days. Thus sulfated GAG are synthesized in excess and the actual net content seems to be co-regulated to a high degree by lysosomal degradation. In both brain parts, a proportional increase of the sulfated GAG content vs the total GAG content from 40% at birth to 90% at 28 days was observed. Since during development heparan sulfate and dermatan sulfate manifested a relative increase in their daily net synthesis besides a decrease of chondroitin sulfates, a developmental increase of the sulfate groups linked to GAG is evidenced. This molecular differentiation resulting in microenvironmental changes may be of high functional significance.  相似文献   

13.
LIM mineralization protein 1 (LMP-1) is an essential positive regulator of osteoblast differentiation, maturation and bone formation. Our previous investigations on the distribution of LMP-1 in mature human teeth indicated that LMP-1 might play a role in the odontoblast differentiation and dentin matrix mineralization. The aim of the present study was to use immunohistochemistry to determine the expression of LMP-1 during tooth development in mouse molars. In embryonic and postnatal Kunming mice, LMP-1 protein was expressed during molar development, but the expression levels and patterns differed at various developmental stages. At embryonic day 13.5 (E13.5), LMP-1 was found in the enamel organ. At E14.5, LMP-1 was detected in the entire enamel organ and in the underlying mesenchyme. At E16.5, LMP-1 was observed in the inner and outer enamel epithelium and the stratum intermedium. The expression also converged at the cusps in the dental papilla. At E18.5 and postnatal day 2.5 (P2.5), LMP-1 was restricted to the stratum intermedium, in differentiating dental papilla cells at cusps, while it disappeared in terminal differentiated ameloblasts and odontoblasts. At P13.5, no positive staining was detected in the odontoblasts or in the dental pulp cells. Therefore, LMP-1 showed spatiotemporal expression patterns during molar development and might participate in molar crown morphogenesis and odontoblast differentiation at late molar development.  相似文献   

14.
Localization of type IV collagen was analyzed at the ultrastructural level in mouse embryonic molars by using a preembedding technique. Cryostat sections were incubated with type IV collagen antibody and then treated with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase complex. This antibody was visualized at the epithelio-mesenchymal interface. Labeling was intense and uniformly distributed throughout the basement membrane. However, it was mainly restricted to the lamina densa. No immunostaining was detectable in the lamina lucida but it was crossed by fine filaments that appeared as projections from the lamina densa to the epithelial cell plasma membrane. At the mesenchymal aspect of the basement membrane, projections of labeled material extended from the lamina densa in the underlying dental mesenchyme. At the presecretory stage of odontoblasts, these projections were in close connection with mesenchymal cell processes.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Several extracellular matrix components (procollagen type III, fibronectin, collagen type IV, laminin and nidogen) and microfilament constituents (actin, α-actinin and vinculin) were localized by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in frozen sections of embryonic mouse molars. Nidogen was present at the epithelio-mesenchymal junction during polarization and initial steps of functional differentiation of odontoblasts. Nidogen disappeared at a stage where direct contacts between preameloblasts and predentin were required to allow the initiation of ameloblast polarization. Our observations concerning the distribution of procollagen type III and fibronectin during odontoblast differentiation add to current knowledge. Procollagen type III and fibronectin surrounding preodontoblasts accumulated at the apical part of polarizing and functional odontoblasts secreting “initial” predentin. Procollagen type III, but not fibronectin, disappeared in front of functional odontoblasts synthesizing “late” predentin and dentin. Fibronectin, present in “initial” predentin, was no longer detected in “late” predentin and dentin but was found between odontoblasts secreting “late” predentin and dentin. Actin, α-actinin and vinculin were concentrated in the peripheral cytoplasm of preameloblasts and accumulated at the apical and basal poles of functional ameloblasts. During differentiation of odontoblasts, the three proteins accumulated at the apical pole of these cells. Time and space correlations between matrix and microfilament modifications during odontoblast and ameloblast differentiation are documented. The possibility is discussed that there is transmembranous control of the cytoskeletal activities of odontoblasts and ameloblasts by the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

16.
Laminin alpha2 is subunit of laminin-2 (alpha2beta1gamma1), which is a major component of the muscle basement membrane. Although the laminin alpha2 chain is expressed in the early stage of dental mesenchyme development and localized in the tooth germ basement membrane, its expression pattern in the late stage of tooth germ development and molecular roles are not clearly understood. We analyzed the role of laminin alpha2 in tooth development by using targeted mice with a disrupted lama2 gene. Laminin alpha2 is expressed in dental mesenchymal cells, especially in odontoblasts and during the maturation stage of ameloblasts, but not in the pre-secretory or secretory stages of ameloblasts. Lama2 mutant mice have thin dentin and a widely opened dentinal tube, as compared with wild-type and heterozygote mice, which is similar to the phenotype of dentinogenesis imperfecta. During dentin formation, the expression of dentin sialoprotein, a marker of odontoblast differentiation, was found to be decreased in odontoblasts from mutant mice. Furthermore, in primary cultures of dental mesenchymal cells, dentin matrix protein, and dentin sialophosphoprotein, mRNA expression was increased in laminin-2 coated dishes but not in those coated with other matrices, fibronectin, or type I collagen. Our results suggest that laminin alpha2 is essential for odontoblast differentiation and regulates the expression of dentin matrix proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Summary We have examined radioautographically the protein synthetic and secretory activity of differentiating odontoblasts and ameloblasts, exposed for 9 h in vitro to various concentrations of colchicine in the presence of 3H-proline. Colchicine impairs the cytodifferentiation of the dental epithelium into ameloblasts and of the dental mesenchyme into odontoblasts; the effects depend on the dose. However, denial epithelial cells are more sensitive to the drug than dental mesenchymal cells. In stages prior to odontoblast differentiation, colchicine enhances the number of radioautographic grains over the dental epithelium without changing the grain counts over the dental basement membrane area: This suggests that in vitro the dental epithelium synthesizes and secretes proline-containing components that are not constituents of the dental basement membrane. Also, during the subsequent stages of ameloblast differentiation colchicine increases the number of radioautographic grains over the preameloblasts. The present data suggest that the primary in vitro target of colchicine is not the dental mesenchyme, but the dental epithelium. The data also indicate that differentiating ameloblasts synthesize and secrete significant amounts of proteins in vitro prior to the first deposition of enamel.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of interposed Nuclepore filters on the epithelio-mesenchymal interaction in embryonic mouse tooth was studied. Filters with pore sizes of 0.6 and 0.2 μm allowed differentiation of odontoblasts and ameloblasts in the bell-stage tooth germ. This differentiation progressed more rapidly when the 0.6-μm pore size filter was used. Nuclepore filters with 0.1-μm pores prevented differentiation. Electron microscopic examination revealed penetration of cell processes into the filter pores. Cytoplasmic material could be seen in the 0.6-μm pore-size filter within 3 days of cultivation, whereas, in the 0.2-μm filter pores, penetration was slight. After 6 days of cultivation, cytoplasmic material was found at all levels of the 0.2-μm pore-size filter, but not in the channels of the 0.1-μm pore-size filters, preventing differentiation. It is concluded that the 0.1-μm pore-size filter blocks tooth development at the level of mesenchymal cell differentiation into odontoblasts. It is suggested that this differentiation requires a close association between the interacting mesenchymal and epithelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
We have explored the role of Wnt signaling in dentinogenesis of mouse molar teeth. We found that Wnt10a was specifically associated with the differentiation of odontoblasts and that it showed striking colocalization with dentin sialophosphoprotein (Dspp) expression in secretory odontoblasts. Dspp is a tooth specific non-collagenous matrix protein and regulates dentin mineralization. Transient overexpression of Wnt10 in C3H10T1/2, a pluripotent fibroblast cell line induced Dspp mRNA. Interestingly, this induction occurred only when transfected cells were cultured on Matrigel basement membrane extracts. These findings indicated that Wnt10a is an upstream regulatory molecule for Dspp expression, and that cell-matrix interaction is essential for induction of Dspp expression. Furthermore, Wnt10a was specifically expressed in the epithelial signaling centers regulating tooth development, the primary and secondary enamel knots. The spatial and temporal distribution of Wnt10a mRNA demonstrated that the expression shifts from the secondary enamel knots, to the underlying preodontoblasts in the tips of future cusps. The expression patterns and overexpression studies together indicate that Wnt10a is a key molecule for dentinogenesis and that it is associated with the cell-matrix interactions regulating odontoblast differentiation. We conclude that Wnt10a may link the differentiation of odontoblasts and cusp morphogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
We have utilized the method of whole embryo culture for metabolic labeling of mouse embryos with [3H]glucosamine during closure of neural folds at the posterior neuropore (27- to 29-somite stage). Accumulations of newly synthesized glycopeptides, lactosaminoglycans, hyaluronate, and sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAG) were assessed by ion-exchange chromatography of glycoconjugates isolated from labeled embryos. Accumulation of hyaluronate and sulfated GAG was greatest in the posterior neuropore and decreased progressively toward the hindbrain where neurulation was already complete. Hyaluronate comprised a progressively smaller proportion of total newly synthesized glycoconjugate from the posterior neuropore toward the cranial region and glycopeptides showed the opposite trend. Sulfated GAG and lactosaminoglycans showed no consistent differences in relative abundance along the neuraxis. Autoradiographic analysis of newly synthesized glycoconjugates revealed especially heavy incorporation into developing basement membranes, beneath the neuroepithelium and around the notochord, in the posterior neuropore and recently closed neural tube regions, but not at more cranial levels of the neuraxis. Predigestion of sections with a specific hyaluronidase showed a significant quantity of this glycoconjugate to be hyaluronate. These results are consistent with a role for neuroepithelial and notochordal basement membrane hyaluronate in spinal neurulation.  相似文献   

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