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1.
Immunodetection of osteoadherin in murine tooth extracellular matrices   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
An antiserum was generated from synthetic peptides highly conserved between different mammalian species to immunolocalise the small leucine-rich proteoglycan osteoadherin (OSAD) in murine teeth. In 19-day-old embryos of rats and mice, a positive staining was found in incisor predentin and alveolar bone surrounding developing incisors and molars. In newborns, OSAD was detected at the tip of the first molar cusp where it accumulated in predentin concomitantly with odontoblast differentiation. In 2-day-old rats and mice, in the first molar, immunostaining revealed positive predentin, enamel matrix close to the apical pole of ameloblasts and a strong signal in dentin. At this stage, OSAD was detected in predentin in the second molar. Ultrastructural immunocytochemistry showed gold particles associated with collagen fibres in predentin and in foci at the dentin mineralisation front. Gold particles were also detected near the secretory pole of ameloblasts where enamel crystallites elongate. No staining was detected in pulp tissue and dental follicle. Restriction of OSAD expression to the extracellular matrix of bone, dentin and enamel suggests a role of this proteoglycan in the organisation of mineralised tissues.  相似文献   

2.
Summary— Suramin, a potent inhibitor of lysosomal enzymes, is commonly employed as a tool for inducing experimental mucopolysaccharidosis and lipidosis. The effects of the drug on embryonic mouse molars were analysed. Presecretory ameloblasts and odontoblasts were loaded with lysosome-like vacuoles. Staining with MC22-33F, an antibody to choline phospholipids and sphingomyelin, was completely reversed in the suramin-treated germs, in that it stained only presecretory ameloblasts (versus odontoblasts and some pulpal cells in the control group), according to a developmentally regulated pattern. The suramin-induced cytoplasmic changes were reminiscent of the features of mucopolysaccharidoses and lipidoses. The basement membrane, separating the enamel organ from the dental papilla, displayed suramin-induced patches, and in predentin collagen fibrillogenesis was found to be disturbed. Furthermore, autoradiography was employed to reveal uptake and distribution of [3H] suramin in the cells and predentin. Finally, a suramin-induced disturbance of the metabolism of sulphated macromolecules was found. The results imply that suramin effects in vitro on tooth germs can be used as a useful experimental model with to study both the action of the drug as well as cell and extracellular matrix perturbations in a mucopolysaccharidosis-like condition.  相似文献   

3.
To determine the functions of fibromodulin (Fmod), a small leucine-rich keratan sulfate proteoglycan in tooth formation, we investigated the distribution of Fmod in dental tissues by immunohistochemistry and characterized the dental phenotype of 1-day-old Fmod-deficient mice using light and transmission electron microscopy. Immunohistochemistry was also used to compare the relative protein expression of dentin sialoprotein (DSP), dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP 1), bone sialoprotein (BSP), and osteopontin (OPN) between Fmod-deficient mice and wild-type mice. In normal mice and rats, Fmod immunostaining was mostly detected in the distal cell bodies of odontoblasts and in the stratum intermedium and was weaker in odontoblast processes and predentin. The absence of Fmod impaired dentin mineralization, increased the diameter of the collagen fibrils throughout the whole predentin, and delayed enamel formation. Immunohistochemistry provides evidence for compensatory mechanisms in Fmod-deficient mice. Staining for DSP and OPN was decreased in molars, whereas DMP 1 and BSP were enhanced. In the incisors, labeling for DSP, DMP 1, and BSP was strongly increased in the pulp and odontoblasts, whereas OPN staining was decreased. Positive staining was also seen for DMP 1 and BSP in secretory ameloblasts. Together these studies indicate that Fmod restricts collagen fibrillogenesis in predentin while promoting dentin mineralization and the early stages of enamel formation.  相似文献   

4.
M Nakai  Y Tatemoto  H Mori  M Mori 《Histochemistry》1985,83(5):455-463
The lectin-binding patterns of the cells involved in amelogenesis and dentinogenesis in developing teeth of rats were studied. Undifferentiated odontogenic epithelia exhibited very slight staining with almost all of the lectins examined. The lectin-staining affinities of secretory ameloblasts could be divided into two categories: Concanavalin-A (Con-A), Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and Soybean agglutinin (SBA) binding occurred from the middle to apical cytoplasm, whereas Ricinus communis agglutinin-I (RCA-I) and Ulex europeus I (UEA-I) binding predominated in the basal regions. The cells of the stratum intermedium exhibited relatively strange lectin staining, which appeared to be dependent on ameloblastic maturation. The basement membranes in undifferentiated epithelia were markedly positive for lectin binding. Odontoblasts showed moderate Con-A staining on the apical side of the cells, as well as slight-to-moderate reactions with WGA and SBA. Pulp cells and dental papillae showed slight-to-moderate lectin staining, and predentin and dentin were also moderately positive for Con-A and RCA-I binding and slightly so for WGA and SBA. The lectin-binding affinities were enhanced during the formation of enamel and dentin, and appeared to be dependent on the degree of cellular differentiation in ameloblasts and odontoblasts.  相似文献   

5.
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) and glycoproteins (GPs) are essential components for dentinogenesis. We have examined rat odontoblasts, predentin, and dentin decalcified with EDTA and stained with: 1) Spicer's hig-iron diamine-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (HID-TCH-SP) method for sulfated glycoconjugates, and 2) Thiéry's periodate-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (PA-TCH-SP) method for vicinal glycol-containing glycoconjugates. HIS-TCH-SP stained distended portions of Golgi saccules and secretory granules. The predentin contained three times the number of HID-TCH-SP stain precipitates when compared to the mineralization front of the dentin matrix. PA-TCH-SP weakly stained membranes of Golgi saccules and cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), whereas stronger staining was observed in secretory granules, lysosomes, and multivesicular bodies (MVBs). Collagen fibrils in predentin demonstrated moderate PA-TCH-SP staining. In contrast, strong PA-TCH-SP staining was observed on and between collagen fibrils in the mineralization front of the dentin matrix. TCH-SP controls of unosmicated specimens lacked significant staining, however, osmicated control specimens did contain some TCH-SP stain deposits in the mineralization front. These results indicate that sulfated and vicinal glycol-containing glycoconjugates are packaged in the same type of secretory granule and released into the extracellular matrix; subsequently vicinal glycol-containing glycoconjugates concentrate in the calcification front, whereas sulfated glycoconjugates accumulate in the predentin and are either removed or masked to staining in the dentin.  相似文献   

6.
We examined immunocytochemically the type and distribution of glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans (PG) in predentin and dentin demineralized with EDTA after aldehyde fixation of rat incisors using (a) four monoclonal antibodies (1-B-5,9-A-2,3-B-3, and 5-D-4) which recognize epitopes in unsulfated chondroitin (C0-S), chondroitin 4-sulfate (C4-S), chondroitin 6-sulfate (C6-S), and keratan sulfate (KS) associated with the PG, and (b) monoclonal (5-D-5) and polyclonal antibodies specific for the core protein of large and small dermatan sulfate (DS) PG. Light microscope immunoperoxidase staining after pre-treatment of tissue sections with chondroitinase ABC localized the majority of stainable PG (C4-S, KS, DSPG, C0-S, and C6-S) in predentin and, to a lesser extent (C4-S and small DSPG), in the dentin matrix. The former site demonstrated relatively homogeneous PG distribution, whereas the latter site revealed that strong staining of C4-S and small DSPG was confined mostly to dentinal tubules surrounding odontoblastic processes, with only weak staining in the rest of the dentin matrix. These results indicate that there is not only a definite difference between PG of predentin and dentin but also a selective decrease in the concentration or alteration of these macromolecules during dentinogenesis and mineralization.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The non-secretory ameloblasts present at the enamel-free surfaces of maxillary teeth in the frog Rana pipiens were examined by electron microscopy at different stages of tooth development. Their main fine structural features seem to reflect a transport function. During early tooth development, the non-secretory ameloblasts adjacent to odontoblasts and predentin exhibit extensive lateral surface specializations and numerous cytoplasmic vesicles. During late tooth development, the non-secretory ameloblasts adjacent to mineralizing dentin show numerous cellular junctions, well-developed intercellular channels with numerous interdigitating processes and labyrinthine configurations at their distal surfaces. An intact basal lamina is present between the non-secretory ameloblasts and the dentin surface until the dentin becomes fully mineralized. At this stage the adjacent cells no longer exhibit surface specializations. It is suggested that the non-secretory ameloblasts may participate in the mineralization of adjacent dentin at the enamel-free surfaces. This surface dentin becomes fully mineralized at a later stage of development than the underlying dentin.  相似文献   

9.
Autometallography was applied to semi-thin sections of rat incisors fixed a solution of cuprolinic blue-aldehyde. The resulting reduction of silver ions to metallic silver amplifies the copper sulfide signal of the cationic dye. Silver grains were seen over the cell bodies of ameloblasts and odontoblasts but not over their processes. This was owing to the interaction of cuprolinic blue with the DNA and RNA of these cells. In the extracellular matrix, silver grains were unevenly distributed over the predentin, dentin, and forming enamel. The distal predentin near the mineralization front and a thin band of dentin located near the dentino-enamel junction displayed unexpectedly intense accumulation of silver grains, whereas all other portions of the extracellular matrix exhibited the distribution of glycosaminoglycans expected from previous studies. The present investigation constitutes a new application of autometallography to glycosaminoglycan histochemistry.  相似文献   

10.
Trimetaphosphatase (TMPase) and cytidine-5'-monophosphatase (CMPase) were used as lysosomal markers in the transitional ameloblasts (TA) to investigate the distribution of lysosomal structures and to correlate the cytochemical findings with the ultrastructural features of these cells. Of particular interest were the cytochemical and morphological changes which occur as the ameloblasts approach the maturation stage of enamel formation. The sequence of changes observed provides a basis for designation of three regions of the transitional zone (early and late TA and modulating ameloblasts). In the early TA region, the cells decreased in height and contained phagic vacuoles as well as numerous TMPase and CMPase reactive structures. Late transitional ameloblasts had invaginations at their distal ends as well as membrane-bound structures, both filled with fine granular material. Dense bodies, phagic vacuoles, and other elements of the lysosomal system were enzyme reactive. Modulating ameloblasts lacked the phagic vacuoles but exhibited large numbers of multivesicular bodies, vesicles, and secretory granules. Their distal ends were morphologically altered indicating a change towards ruffle- or smooth-ended varieties of maturation ameloblast. In the former, increased granular material was observed within cell membrane invaginations and associated membrane-bound structures. In the latter, intercellular spaces widened and were filled with granular material. The present cytochemical findings of an extensive lyosomal system in transitional ameloblasts confirm the function of those cells in reducing the secretory ameloblast population and in the selective elimination of their protein-synthesizing organelles. Furthermore, this extensive lysosmal system and the present morphological findings are consistent with a potential role for transitional ameloblasts in contributing to the marked loss of enamel protein known to occur during maturation.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Tilorone, an agent with antiviral and antitumor activities, has previously been reported to produce clear cytoplasmic vacuoles in many cell types of the rat. The present study on rat spleen was planned to investigate the ultrastructural and histochemical features of the tilorone-induced vacuoles occurring in sinus endothelium, trabecular smooth muscle cells, and macrophages of the red pulp. Evidence was obtained that the vacuoles represent lysosomes overloaded with acid glycosaminoglycans (aGAG). The main purpose of the present study was to overcome the technical difficulties of preserving the intralysosomal storage materials which were highly water-soluble and non-fixable by aldehyde fixatives. Preservation, at least for the light microscopical level, was achieved by freeze drying and by means of cationic dyes which served also to characterize the storage materials on the basis of their acidities. Tissue slices were used to determine the critical MgCl2 concentration necessary to abolish Alcian blue staining; cartilage and mast cells served as references. For the storage material in sinus endothelium, the critical MgCl2 concentration was found to be >0.7 M, as compared to >0.5 M for cartilage and >0.9 M for mast cells. The storage materials in trabecular cells and macrophages were slightly less acidic than cartilagineous matrix and more heterogeneous than that in sinus endothelium. Ultrastructurally, positive staining with high iron diamine (HID) confirmed the presence of aGAG within the tilorone-induced vacuoles.  相似文献   

12.
Using NBD-phallacidin, which specifically binds to F-actin, we investigated changes in the localization of actin during the differentiation of ameloblasts, related epithelial cells and odontoblasts in rat incisors. In cryosections treated with NBD-phallacidin, intense fluorescence was observed in undifferentiated epithelial cells in the apical loop and at the proximal extremity of undifferentiated inner enamel epithelial cells. During differentiation, the distal extremity began to exhibit strong fluorescence. In cross-sections of secretory ameloblasts, the fluorescence took the form of polygons of uniform intensity at the proximal end, and of rectangles of non-uniform intensity at the distal end. At the distal end, the fluorescence was more intense at right angles to the long axis of the incisor. At the distal end, this pattern was established just before the appearance of the enamel layer. These patterns were maintained during the secretory stage of ameloblasts. The location, pattern and time of appearance of these sites were identical to those of the terminal webs in ameloblasts. NBD-phallacidin weakly labelled the peripheral cytoplasm of the cell body of ameloblasts, and also labelled Tomes' process. The cells forming the stratum intermedium were mainly labelled at their periphery (i.e. forming larger polygons), while the overlying epithelial cells exhibited labelling throughout their cytoplasm. Except for the terminal webs, the cell bodies of odontoblasts were weakly labelled throughout the period of differentiation. Young odontoblasts secreting predentin were first labelled on the terminal web, with the fluorescence becoming gradually more intense as the thickness of the dentin increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Acellular dental matrices promote functional differentiation of ameloblasts   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
EDTA treatment of post-natal mouse molars made possible the isolation of cell-free dental matrices composed of basal lamina, predentin, dentin and enamel. Trypsin-isolated dental papillae and enamel organs from embryonic-mouse mandibular molars were combined with isolated matrices and cultured in vitro. In such recombinations, functional odontoblasts were never observed. On the other hand, competent preameloblasts in contact with the epithelial side of occlusal predentin overtly differentiated. Matrices treated with guanidine-EDTA or acetic acid were unable to promote the functional differentiation of ameloblasts. These data are discussed in terms of the epitheliomesenchymal interactions involved in odontogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The lectin-binding patterns of the cells involved in amelogenesis and dentinogenesis in developing teeth of rats, were studied. Undifferentiated odontogenic epithelia exhibited very slight staining with almost all of the lectins examined. The lectin-staining affinities of secretory ameloblasts could be divided into two categories: Concanavalin-A (Con-A), Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and Soybean agglutinin (SBA) binding occurred from the middle to apical cytoplasm, whereas Ricinus communis agglutinin-I (RCA-I) and Ulex europeus I (UEA-I) binding predominated in the basal regions. The cells of the stratum intermedium exhibited relatively stranges lectin staining, which appeared to be dependent on ameloblastic maturation. The basement membranes in undifferentiated epithelia were markedly positive for lectin binding. Odontoblasts showed moderate Con-A staining on the apical side of the cells, as well as slight-to-moderate reactions with WGA and SBA. Pulp cells and dental papillae showed slight-to-moderate lectin staining, and predentin and dentin were also moderately positive for Con-A and RCA-I binding and slightly so for WGA and SBA. The lectin-binding affinities were enhanced during the formation of enamel and dentin, and appeared to be dependent on the degree of cellular differentiation in ameloblasts and odontoblasts.  相似文献   

15.
Rat incisor tissue sections were fixed by a modified version of the malachite green-aldehyde method (MGA) composed of rapid-freezing, malachite green-acrolein staining, and osmium tetroxide freeze-substitution (Fr.MGAO). In the pre-dentin, a thick, dense network of branched fibrous structures was observed. Cryotechniques allowed visualization of complexes about twice as thick and dense as the aggregates visualized on MGA-treated sections. Pretreatment of rapid-frozen samples with methanol before freeze-substitution fixation and staining prevented staining of the complexes otherwise revealed by the Fr.MGAO method. Electron-dense material stained by this procedure resisted de-mineralization with EDTA, while intramitochondrial granules and dentin crystallites were dissolved. EDTA treatment demonstrated unequal distribution of Fr.MGAO staining in dentin in the form of tiny dots underlining the collagen fibers. These results support the concept that rapid-freezing, followed by staining and freeze-substitution fixation, improves preservation of the phospholipids visualized as extracellular matrix components in pre-dentin and dentin of rat incisors.  相似文献   

16.
Potassium pyroantimonate-osmium tetroxide cytochemistry has been used to study the distribution of ionic calcium in hamster tooth germs during cell differentiation and during early dentinogenesis and amelogenesis. Before the onset of mineralization, pyroantimonate (PA) reaction product was found in the nucleus of differentiating preameloblasts and preodontoblasts. In the predentin, it was preferentially located along striated collagen fibrils, lying perpendicular to the basal lamina. At the onset of mineralization, a pronounced increase of PA reaction product was evident in the predentin and on the plasma membrane and in mitochondria of both preodontoblasts and preameloblasts opposite the mineralizing mantle dentin. During early enamel mineralization, PA reaction product was present in the "growing" crystal ends, while in the secretory ameloblasts, most of the PA reaction product was localized on the cytoplasmic side of the apical plasma membranes and in mitochondria. When Tomes' processes developed, PA reaction product, both cytoplasmic and membrane bound, was low or absent deep in the processes, but gradually increased toward the apical terminal web. A corresponding gradient of PA reaction product was observed on the opposing enamel crystallites. From this study we conclude that both preodontoblasts and preameloblasts seem to be involved in calcium acquisition necessary for the early stages of mantle dentin mineralization. Tomes' processes seem to regulate the entry of calcium into the enamel mineralization front.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The fine structure of differentiating ameloblasts was studied in the lower second molar of 1-week-old kittens after perfusion fixation with and without subsequent decalcification. The differentiation zone was divided into three phases. In Differentiation 1, ameloblasts are about 27 mum long and face an uninterrupted basal lamina. The predentin adjacent to the basal lamina contains a few collagen fibrils oriented mainly at right angles to the ameloblast surface. The specialized predentin forms a well-defined layer, up to 1.5 mum thick, referred to as the junctional layer. In Differentiation 2, ameloblast processes extend through the basal lamina and the thickness of the junctional layer. The processes consist of cytoplasmic sheets forming a honeycomb-like network. Dentin starts to calcify after process-formation is underway. Two distinct types of odontoblast processes, having different shapes and contents, come in contact with the ameloblasts and push into the ameloblastic layer. In Differentiation 3, stippled material appears in the extracellular spaces between ameloblasts. Later, stippled material-like substances appear in the predentin close to the ameloblast apex and close to odontoblast processes within the dentin. Ameloblasts now are up to 40 mum high. Enamel secretion starts in small circumscribed areas which gradually enlarge, leading to the disappearance of the ameloblast processes. These findings are compared with results obtained in other species, including man, and their possible functional significance is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Previous studies have reported that calreticulin (CRT), a calcium-binding and chaperoning protein, is expressed only in the endoplasmatic reticulum, nucleus and at the cell surface. In this study we clearly show that odontoblasts and predentin matrix contain CRT. To our knowledge, this is the first time CRT has been described in the extracellular matrix. The expression of CRT was studied by immunohistochemistry, ultrastructural immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization in developing rat teeth. CRT was detected as a 59-kDa protein in rat pulp cell culture medium and dentin extracellular matrix extract by Western blotting. The presence of the protein was shown in rat odontoblasts and predentin with immunohistochemistry. At the ultrastructural level, the labeling was distributed in the rat odontoblasts, ameloblasts and predentin. Northern blotting showed the presence of CRT mRNA in rat molars, which was confirmed by in situ hybridization in odontoblasts and ameloblasts. We now present the first convincing evidence that CRT is found in extracellular matrix where it may play an important role in mineralization.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The gingiva of rat molars was studied at the light microscope level using glutaraldehyde as fixative, Cuprolinic Blue for visualizing polyanionic glycosaminoglycans and the autometallographic technique for enhancing the copper signal of the cationic dye. The polyanions were located inside the epithelial cells in the junctional epithelium, whereas a network located along either the plasma membrane or the intercellular spaces, or both, of the gingival oral epithelium and sulcular oral epithelium was evident with autometallography. In these cases, positive staining was limited to the basal and spinous layers, the granular and keratinized layers being unstained. With the transmission electron microscope, electron-dense aggregates were seen in the gingival lamina propria, in the basement membrane and along the plasma membrane of the keratinocytes of the basal and spinous layers of the gingival and sulcular oral epithelia. In the junctional epithelium, Cuprolinic Blue-positive granules, 25 nm in diameter, were seen in the cytoplasm. Together with some vesicles containing electron-dense material, they may account for the staining process noted after autometallography. When the ultra-thin sections were digested with bovine testicular hyaluronidase, the staining was abolished. This indicates that glycosaminoglycans were primarily responsible for the staining pattern visualized with these methods. In the junctional epithelium, the cytosolic location of the 25 nm granules reflects either transcellular transfer between the plasma membrane and the nucleus or accumulation of glycosaminoglycans in this group of keratinocytes. The glycoconjugates located inside vesicles or vacuoles are related to endocytosis and lysosomal degradation. Interstitial glycosaminoglycans seen in the two types of oral epithelium may play a role in the diffusion of water and nutriments.  相似文献   

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