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1.
In this study, starting from human dental pulp cells cultured in vitro, we simulated reparative dentinogenesis using a medium supplemented with different odontogenic inductors. The differentiation of dental pulp cells in odontoblast-like cells was evaluated by means of staining, and ultramorphological, biochemical and biomolecular methods. Alizarin red staining showed mineral deposition while transmission electron microscopy revealed a synthesis of extracellular matrix fibers during the differentiation process. Biochemical assays demonstrated that the differentiated phenotype expressed odontoblast markers, such as Dentin Matrix Protein 1 (DMP1) and Dentin Sialoprotein (DSP), as well as type I collagen. Quantitative data regarding the mRNA expression of DMP1, DSP and type I collagen were obtained by Real Time PCR. Immunofluorescence data demonstrated the various localizations of DSP and DMP1 during odontoblast differentiation. Based on our results, we obtained odontoblast-like cells which simulated the reparative dentin processes in order to better investigate the mechanism of odontoblast differentiation, and dentin extracellular matrix deposition and mineralization.Key words: dental tissue, in vitro differentiation, DMP1, DSP, type I collagen  相似文献   

2.
I Thesleff 《Ontogenez》1989,20(4):341-349
A series of reciprocal interactions between epithelial and mesenchymal tissues control the morphogenesis and cell differentiation in the developing tooth. The molecular mechanisms operating in these interactions are, however, unknown at present. Structural components of the extracellular matrix (ECM) affect cellular behavior in the embryo and appear to be involved also in these regulatory processes. The ECM molecules exert their effects on cells through binding to specific matrix receptors on the cell surface. This review article summarizes our findings on the distribution patterns during tooth development of the ECM glycoproteins, fibronectin and tenascin, and of the cell surface proteoglycan, syndecan, which functions as a receptor for interstitial matrix. Based on the observed changes in these distribution patterns and on experimental evidence, roles for these molecules in epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during tooth development are suggested. Fibronectin and tenascin are enriched in the dental basement membrane at the time of odontoblast differentiation. These matrix glycoproteins may be involved in the cell-matrix interaction which controls differentiation of the dental mesenchymal cells into odontoblasts. Tenascin and syndecan are accumulated in the dental mesenchyme during bud stage of development. We have shown in tissue recombination experiments that the presumptive dental epithelium induces the expression of tenascin and syndecan in mesenchyme. We suggest that these molecules are involved in cell-matrix interactions, which regulate mesenchymal cell condensation during the earliest stages of tooth morphogenesis.  相似文献   

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We identified a new extracellular protein, TM14, by differential hybridization using mouse tooth germ cDNA microarrays. TM14 cDNA encodes 440 amino acids containing a signal peptide. The protein contains 3 EGF modules at the center, a C-terminal domain homologous to the fibulin module, and a unique Sushi domain at the N terminus. In situ hybridization revealed that TM14 mRNA was expressed by preodontoblasts and odontoblasts in developing teeth. TM14 mRNA was also expressed in cartilage, hair follicles, and extraembryonic tissues of the placenta. Immunostaining revealed that TM14 was localized at the apical pericellular regions of preodontoblasts. When the dentin matrix was fully formed and dentin mineralization occurred, TM14 was present in the predentin matrix and along the dentinal tubules. We found that the recombinant TM14 protein was glycosylated with N-linked oligosaccharides and interacted with heparin, fibronectin, fibulin-1, and dentin sialophosphoprotein. We also found that TM14 preferentially bound dental mesenchyme cells and odontoblasts but not dental epithelial cells or nondental cells such as HeLa, COS7, or NIH3T3 cells. Heparin, EDTA, and anti-integrin beta1 antibody inhibited TM14 binding to dental mesenchyme cells, suggesting that both a heparan sulfate-containing cell surface receptor and an integrin are involved in TM14 cell binding. Our findings indicate that TM14 is a cell adhesion molecule that interacts with extracellular matrix molecules in teeth and suggest that TM14 plays important roles in both the differentiation and maintenance of odontoblasts as well as in dentin formation. Because of its protein characteristics, TM14 can be classified as a new member of the fibulin family: fibulin-7.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Morphogenesis and cell differentiation in the developing tooth are controlled by a series of reciprocal interactions between the epithelial and mesenchymal tissues. The exact molecular mechanisms operating in these interactions are unknown at present, but both structural components of the extracellular matrix (ECM) and diffusible growth factors have been suggested to be involved. In this review article we summarize our findings on the distribution patterns of three ECM molecules and two cell surface receptors during tooth morphogenesis through bud, cap, and bell stages of development. The examined molecules include fibronectin, type III collagen, and tenascin, which all represent components of the mesenchymal ECM, the cell surface proteoglycan, syndecan, which functions as a receptor for interstitial matrix, and the cell surface receptor for epidermal growth factor. Based on the observed changes in distribution patterns and on experimental evidence, roles are suggested for these molecules in epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during tooth development. Fibronectin is suggested to be involved in the cell-matrix interaction that controls odontoblast differentiation. Epidermal growth factor and its receptors are suggested to be involved in a paracrine fashion in the epithelial-mesenchymal interactions regulating morphogenesis of bud- and cap-stage teeth. Tenascin and syndecan are accumulated in the dental mesenchyme during the bud stage of development, and it is suggested that they represent a couple of a cell surface receptor and its matrix ligand and that they are involved in mesenchymal cell condensation during the earliest stages of tooth morphogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
To gain a better understanding of the progression of progenitor cells in the odontoblast lineage, we have examined and characterized the expression of a series of GFP reporters during odontoblast differentiation. However, previously reported GFP reporters (pOBCol2.3‐GFP, pOBCol3.6‐GFP, and DMP1‐GFP), similar to the endogenous proteins, are also expressed by bone‐forming cells, which made it difficult to delineate the two cell types in various in vivo and in vitro studies. To overcome these difficulties we generated DSPP‐Cerulean/DMP1‐Cherry transgenic mice using a bacterial recombination strategy with the mouse BAC clone RP24‐258g7. We have analyzed the temporal and spatial expression of both transgenes in tooth and bone in vivo and in vitro. This transgenic animal enabled us to visualize the interactions between odontoblasts and surrounding tissues including dental pulp, ameloblasts and cementoblasts. Our studies showed that DMP1‐Cherry, similar to Dmp1, was expressed in functional and fully differentiated odontoblasts as well as osteoblasts, osteocytes and cementoblasts. Expression of DSPP‐Cerulean transgene was limited to functional and fully differentiated odontoblasts and correlated with the expression of Dspp. This transgenic animal can help in the identification and isolation of odontoblasts at later stages of differentiation and help in better understanding of developmental disorders in dentin and odontoblasts.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The formation of dentin provides one well accepted paradigm for studying mineralized tissue formation. For the assembly of dentin, several cellular signaling pathways cooperate to provide neural crest-derived mesenchymal cells with positional information. Further, "cross-talk" between signaling pathways from the mesenchymal derived odontoblast cells and the epithelially derived ameloblasts during development is responsible for the formation of functional odontoblasts. These intercellular signals are tightly regulated, both temporally and spatially. When isolated from the developing tooth germ, odontoblasts quickly lose their potential to maintain the odontoblast-specific phenotype. Therefore, generation of an odontoblast cell line would be a valuable reproducible tool for studying the modulatory effects involved in odontoblast differentiation as well as the molecular events involved in mineralized dentin formation. In this study an immortalized odontoblast cell line, which has the required biochemical machinery to produce mineralized tissue in vitro, has been generated. These cells were implanted into animal models to determine their in vivo effects on dentin formation. After implantation, we observed a multistep, programmed cascade of gene expression in the exogenous odontoblasts as the dentin formed de novo. Some of the genes expressed include the dentin matrix proteins 1, 2, and 3, which are extracellular matrix molecules responsible for the ultimate formation of mineralized dentin. The biological response was also examined by histology and radiography and confirmed for mineral deposition by von Kossa staining. Thus, a transformed odontoblast cell line was created with high proliferative capacity that might ultimately be used for the regeneration and repair of dentin in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
To assess the requirement for specific or possibly non-specific epithelial instructions for mesenchymal cell differentiation, we designed studies to evaluate and compare homotypic with heterotypic tissue recombinations across vertebrate species. These studies further tested the hypothesis that determined dental papilla mesenchyme requires epithelial-derived instructions to differentiate into functional odontoblast cells using a serumless, chemically-defined medium. Theiler stage 25 C57BL/6 or Swiss Webster cap stage mandibular first molar tooth organs or trypsin-dissociated, homotypic epithelial-mesenchymal tissue recombinants resulted in the differentiation of odontoblasts within 3 days. Epithelial differentiation into functional ameloblasts was observed within 7 days. Trypsin-dissociated and isolated mesenchyme did not differentiate into odontoblasts under these experimental conditions. Heterotypic recombinants between quail Hamburger-Hamilton stages 22–26 mandibular epithelium and Theiler stage 25 dental papilla mesenchyme routinely resulted in odontoblast differentiation within 3 days in vitro. Odontoblast differentiation and the production of dentine extracellular matrix continued throughout the 10 days in organ culture. Ultrastructural observations of the interface between quail and mouse tissues indicated the reconstitution of the basal lamina as well as the maintenance of an intact basal lamina during 10 days in vitro. Quail epithelial cells did not differentiate into ameloblasts and no enamel extracellular matrix was observed. These results show that quail mandibular epithelium can provide the required developmental instructions for odontoblast differentiation in the absence of serum or other exogenous humoral factors in a chemically-defined medium. They also suggest the importance of reciprocal epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during epidermal organogenesis.  相似文献   

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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   

13.
Tooth enamel is formed by epithelially-derived cells called ameloblasts, while the pulp dentin complex is formed by the dental mesenchyme. These tissues differentiate with reciprocal signaling interactions to form a mature tooth. In this study we have characterized ameloblast differentiation in human developing incisors, and have further investigated the role of extracellular matrix proteins on ameloblast differentiation. Histological and immunohistochemical analyses showed that in the human tooth, the basement membrane separating the early developing dental epithelium and mesenchyme was lost shortly before dentin deposition was initiated, prior to enamel matrix secretion. Presecretary ameloblasts elongated as they came into contact with the dentin matrix, and then shortened to become secretory ameloblasts. In situ hybridization showed that the presecretory stage of odontoblasts started to express type I collagen mRNA, and also briefly expressed amelogenin mRNA. This was followed by upregulation of amelogenin mRNA expression in secretory ameloblasts. In vitro, amelogenin expression was upregulated in ameloblast lineage cells cultured in Matrigel, and was further up-regulated when these cells/Matrigel were co-cultured with dental pulp cells. Co-culture also up-regulated type I collagen expression by the dental pulp cells. Type I collagen coated culture dishes promoted a more elongated ameloblast lineage cell morphology and enhanced cell adhesion via integrin α2β1. Taken together, these results suggest that the basement membrane proteins and signals from underlying mesenchymal cells coordinate to initiate differentiation of preameloblasts and regulate type I collagen expression by odontoblasts. Type I collagen in the dentin matrix then anchors the presecretary ameloblasts as they further differentiate to secretory cells. These studies show the critical roles of the extracellular matrix proteins in ameloblast differentiation.  相似文献   

14.
Dentin matrix protein 1 (DMP 1) is an acidic phosphoprotein that has been postulated to play an important role in mineralized tissue formation. We have examined rat molar tooth germs by applying a high-resolution immunocytochemical approach with the purpose to identify the temporal and spatial localization of DMP 1 at the onset of dentinogenesis. Upper molar tooth germs of 2- to 3-day-old Wistar rats were fixed in a cacodylate-buffered 0.1% glutaraldehyde + 4% formaldehyde fixative, left unosmicated and embedded in LR White resin. The sections were incubated with a polyclonal DMP 1 antibody for postembedding colloidal gold immunolabeling and examined in a Jeol 1010 transmission electron microscope. The earliest localization of DMP 1 was in the Golgi region as well as in the nucleus of differentiating odontoblasts. When mineralization spread from matrix vesicles to the surrounding matrix, DMP 1 was extracellularly detected around the mineralizing globules. In the regions of fully mineralized mantle dentin, it was present in the mineralized regions, mainly around the peritubular dentin. The appearance of DMP 1 during early dentinogenesis implies a direct role for this protein in both odontoblast differentiation and matrix mineralization.  相似文献   

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Bone morphogenetic protein 2 (Bmp2) is essential for odontogensis and dentin mineralization. Generation of floxed Bmp2 dental mesenchymal cell lines is a valuable application for studying the effects of Bmp2 on dental mesenchymal cell differentiation and its signaling pathways during dentinogenesis. Limitation of the primary culture of dental mesenchymal cells has led to the development of cell lines that serve as good surrogate models for the study of dental mesenchymal cell differentiation into odontoblasts and mineralization. In this study, we established and characterized immortalized mouse floxed Bmp2 dental papilla mesenchymal cell lines, which were isolated from 1st mouse mandibular molars at postnatal day 1 and immortalized with pSV40 and clonally selected. These transfected cell lines were characterized by RT‐PCR, immunohistochemistry, and analyzed for alkaline phosphatase activity and mineralization nodule formation. One of these immortalized cell lines, iBmp2‐dp, displayed a higher proliferation rate, but retained the genotypic and phenotypic characteristics similar to primary cells as determined by expression of tooth‐specific markers as well as demonstrated the ability to differentiate and form mineralized nodules. In addition, iBmp2‐dp cells were inducible and responded to BMP2 stimulation. Thus, we for the first time described the establishment of an immortalized mouse floxed Bmp2 dental papilla mesenchyma cell line that might be used for studying the mechanisms of dental cell differentiation and dentin mineralization mediated by Bmp2 and other growth factor signaling pathways. J. Cell. Physiol. 225: 132–139, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
ABSTRACT

The TGFβ superfamily of proteins participates in tooth development. TGFβ1 and TGFβ3 regulate odontoblast differentiation and dentin extracellular matrix synthesis. Although the expression of TGFβ family member ligands is well-characterized during mammalian tooth development, less is known about the TGFβ receptor, which is a heteromeric complex consisting of a type I and type II receptors. The molecular mechanism of ALK5 (TGFβR1) in the dental mesenchyme is not clear. We investigated the role of ALK5 in tooth germ mesenchymal cells (TGMCs) from the lower first molar tooth germs of day 15.5 embryonic mice. Human recombinant TGFβ3 protein or an ALK5 inhibitor (SD208) was added to the cells. Cell proliferation was inhibited by SD208 and promoted by TGFβ3. We found that SD208 inhibited TGMCs osteogenesis and dentinogenesis. Both canonical and noncanonical TGFβ signaling pathways participated in the process. TAK1, P-TAK1, p38 and P-p38 showed greater expression and SMAD4 showed less expression when ALK5 was inhibited. Our findings contribute to understanding the role of TGFβ signaling for the differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells derived from dental germ and suggest possible targets for optimizing the use of stem cells of dental origin for tissue regeneration.  相似文献   

19.
The histone demethylase, lysine (K)-specific demethylase 2A (Kdm2a), is highly conserved and expressed ubiquitously. Kdm2a can regulate cell proliferation and osteo/dentinogenic, adipogenic and chondrogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) derived from dental tissue. We used quantitative real-time RT-PCR analysis and immunohistochemistry to detect Kdm2a expression during development of the murine molar at embryonic days E12, E14, E16 and E17 and postnatal days P3 and P14. Immunohistochemistry results showed no positive staining of Kdm2a at E12. At E14, Kdm2a was expressed weakly in the inner enamel epithelium, stellate reticulum cells and dental sac. At E16, Kdm2a was expressed mainly in the inner and outer enamel epithelium, stratum intermedium and dental sac, but weaker staining was found in cervical loop and dental papilla cells adjacent to the basement membrane. At E17, the strongest Kdm2a staining was detected in the ameloblasts and stronger Kdm2a staining also was detected in the stratum intermedium, outer enamel epithelium and dental papilla cells compared to the expression at E16. Postnatally, we found that Kdm2a was localized in secretory and mature ameloblasts and odontoblasts, and dentin was unstained. Real-time RT-PCR showed that Kdm2a mRNA levels in murine germ cells increased from E12 to E14 and from E14 to E16; no significant change occurred at E16, E17 or P3, then the levels decreased at P14 compared to P3. Kdm2a expression may be closely related to cell proliferation, to ameloblast and odontoblast differentiation and to the secretion of extracellular enamel and dentin during murine tooth development.  相似文献   

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