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1.
Semaphorin 7A (SEMA 7A) is a membrane-anchored member of the semaphorin family of guidance proteins, previously identified in the immune system. Expressed in central and peripheral nervous system during embryonic and post-natal stages, it can mediate neuronal functions by promoting axonal growth. We show here that SEMA 7A is expressed in human odontoblasts in vivo and in vitro and that its expression is correlated with the establishment of dentin-pulp complex terminal innervation . Co-cultures of trigeminal ganglion (TG) with COS cells overexpressing SEMA 7A demonstrate that SEMA 7A can promote the growth of trigeminal nerve fibers. Finally, by RT-PCR and immunochemistry, we show that beta1-integrin, a SEMA 7A putative receptor, is expressed in pulpal nerve fibers but we failed to detect a co-localization between nerves and odontoblasts through these molecules. On the basis of these data, we suggest that SEMA 7A might be a molecule involved in the terminal innervation of the dentin-pulp complex.  相似文献   

2.
Interactions between ingrowing nerve fibers and their target tissues form the basis for functional connectivity with the central nervous system. Studies of the developing dental pulp innervation by nerve fibers from the trigeminal ganglion is an excellent example of nerve-target tissue interactions and will allow specific questions regarding development of the dental pulp nerve system to be addressed. Dental pulp cells (DPC) produce an array of neurotrophic factors during development, suggesting that these proteins might be involved in supporting trigeminal nerve fibers that innervate the dental pulp. We have established an in vitro culture system to study the interactions between the dental pulp cells and trigeminal neurons. We show that dental pulp cells produce several neurotrophic factors in culture. When DPC are cocultured with trigeminal neurons, they promote survival and a specific and elaborate neurite outgrowth pattern from trigeminal neurons, whereas skin fibroblasts do not provide a similar support. In addition, we show that dental pulp tissue becomes innervated when transplanted ectopically into the anterior chamber of the eye in rats, and upregulates the catecholaminergic nerve fiber density of the irises. Interestingly, grafting the dental pulp tissue into hemisected spinal cord increases the number of surviving motoneurons, indicating a functional bioactivity of the dental pulp-derived neurotrophic factors in vivo by rescuing motoneurons. Based on these findings, we propose that dental pulp-derived neurotrophic factors play an important role in orchestrating the dental pulp innervation.  相似文献   

3.
This study was undertaken to localize substance P-like immunoreactivity (SP) in the nerve fibers innervating the palate, identify the ganglion of the palatine nerve and determine whether it contains SP cell bodies, in the frog Rana pipiens. The palatine nerve which is a branch of the maxillo-mandibular subdivision of the trigeminal nerve was traced to the trigeminal ganglion that connects to the medulla by the trigeminal nerve root. Using an immunocytochemical method, SP containing fibers with varicosities were found in the connective tissue layer of the palate. Some of these fibers were observed adjacent to blood vessels to the epithelial layer of the palate in apparent innervation of the ciliated epithelial and mucus cells. SP-labeling was also observed in small to medium cells of the trigeminal ganglion. These results appear to support the pharmacological studies of SP on the regulation of mucociliary activity in the frog R. pipiens.  相似文献   

4.
High-affinity tyrosine kinase A (trkA) neurotrophin receptors on neurons and nonneuronal cells elicit differentiation or survival functions in response to nerve growth factor (NGF), whereas the low-affinity neurotrophin (p75) receptor modulates trkA activity or can independently cause apoptosis or NFkappaB-mediated survival functions. We examined dental tissues for the presence of trkA-like immunoreactivity (trkA-IR), to determine which nonneuronal cell types express it in normal compared with inflamed teeth and how the trkA-positive cells relate to those expressing the p75 receptor and/or NGF. Normal and injured rat molars (dentin cavity for 4 h, 16-24 h, 3 days, 16 days, or 5 weeks) were immunoreacted using the ABC detection system for two anti-trkA antibodies (sTA, Santa Cruz Biotechnology; rTA, L. Reichardt) and antibodies against p75 and NGF, all of which also stained pulpal nerve fibers. We report that, when using the sTA antibody (recognizing the intracellular carboxy terminal), nonneuronal trkA-IR was found in odontoblasts of normal teeth and also in invading polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) and reparative odontoblasts after injury. When using rTA (recognizing the extracellular domain of the receptor), nonneuronal trkA-IR was only found in odontoblasts. Odontoblasts also had NGF-IR but did not label for NGF mRNA. The lack of odontoblast NGF mRNA suggests that NGF is passed from fibroblasts to the adjacent odontoblasts, where it is picked up by receptor-mediated mechanisms for regulation of odontoblast function. Tooth injury disrupts this system such that trkA-IR decreases in injured odontoblasts, p75 decreases in fibroblasts, and NGF is upregulated by fibroblasts and accumulates in the injured pulp and surviving odontoblasts. Pulpal NGF may contribute to chemoattraction for the invading leukocytes or their sTA-IR may have been induced in response to pulpal NGF. Thus, tooth pulp has a different distribution of nonneuronal NGF and its paracrine receptors during inflammation compared with normal conditions.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The integument of the hagfish Myxine glutinosa is described with respect to the topography and the fine structural organization of the dermal and hypodermal nerve fiber plexus. Both nerve fiber plexuses contain small ganglion cells with axodendritic and axosomatic synapscs. The six barbels of the head (4 nasal and 2 oral barbels) are supplied with about 5600 afferent trigeminal nerve fibers via the right and left ophthalmic nerve. With respect to the topography of the sensory nerve terminals in the barbels different types of receptors are termed the external cuff receptor, internal cuff receptor, and perichondrial receptor. Free nerve terminals occur within the epidermal layer, especially at the tip region of the barbels and in the glassy membrane of the dermis. The hypodermal edge receptor organ extends from the ventral nasal barbel to the oral barbel. A mechanoreceptive function of the different receptor types is discussed. The innervation pattern of the barbel is similar to the innervation of the mammalian sinus hair. In this context, the barbel is a highly differentiated receptor organ able to explore the nearest surroundings with high stereognostic perception. The ganglion cells of the skin seem to represent a part of the peripheral autonomic nervous system, which is involved in the control of secretion mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
The present immunohistochemical study by use of antisera against neurofilament protein (NFP) and S-100 protein dealt with the innervation of the upper incisors and periodontal ligament in five species of rodents including the guinea pig, hamster, Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguicularis), mouse and squirrel (Tamias sibiricus). The innervation pattern of the periodontal ligament and dental pulp in the incisors of five rodents was fundamentally identical to that in the rat, which we have previously demonstrated by the same method. The NFP-positive Ruffini-like corpuscles were concentrated in the middle region of the lingual periodontal ligament in all the species examined, suggesting that this particular arrangement of Ruffini-like corpuscles, possibly stretch receptors, was essential to the rodent incisor. The labial periodontal ligament, on the other hand, contained less numerous NFP-positive nerves, these terminating among collagen fibers as free endings. The gerbil and squirrel in particular possessed only a few nerve fibers in the labial periodontal ligament. It was thus presumed that the labial periodontal ligament might be less significant as a mechanoreceptive site than the lingual periodontal ligament. The NFP-positive pulpal nerves, beaded or smooth in shape, ran parallel to the tooth axis, but never extended to the odontoblastic layer; no subodontoblastic plexus was found in the incisors of any of the rodents. S-100-immunopositive nervous elements were distributed in the periodontal ligament and dental pulp of all the rodent species examined, showing a distribution pattern similar to the NFP-positive nerves. Only in the squirrel did odontoblasts show an intense S-100 immunoreactivity.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Development of the facial nerve was studied in normal chicken embryos and after surgical disruption of ingrowing sensory facial nerve fibers at 38–72 h of incubation. Disruption of facial nerve fibers by otocyst removal often induced a rostral deviation of the facial nerve and ganglion to the level of the trigeminal ganglion. Cell bodies of the geniculate ganglion trailed their deviating neurites and occupied an abnormal rostral position adjacent to the trigeminal ganglion. Deviating facial nerve fibers were labeled with the carbocyanine fluorescent tracer Dil in fixed tissue. Labeled fibers penetrated the cranium adjacent to the trigeminal ganglion, but they did not follow the trigeminal nerve fibers into the brain stem. Rather, after entering the cranium, they projected caudally to their usual site of entrance and proceeded towards their normal targets. This rostral deviation of the facial nerve was observed only after surgery at 48–72 h of incubation, but not in cases with early otocyst removal (38–48 h). A rostral deviation of the facial nerve was seen in cases with partial otocyst removal when the vestibular nerve was absent. The facial nerve followed its normal course when the vestibular nerve persisted. We conclude that disruption of the devloping facial pathway altered the routes of navigating axons, but did not prevent pathfinding and innervation of the normal targets. Pathfinding abilities may not be restricted to pioneering axons of the facial nerve; later-developing facial nerve fibers also appeared to have positional information. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that navigating axons may respond to multiple guidance cues during development. These cues appear to differ as a function of position of the navigating axon. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Development of the facial nerve was studied in normal chicken embryos and after surgical disruption of ingrowing sensory facial nerve fibers at 38-72 h of incubation. Disruption of facial nerve fibers by otocyst removal often induced a rostral deviation of the facial nerve and ganglion to the level of the trigeminal ganglion. Cell bodies of the geniculate ganglion trailed their deviating neurites and occupied an abnormal rostral position adjacent to the trigeminal ganglion. Deviating facial nerve fibers were labeled with the carbocyanine fluorescent tracer DiI in fixed tissue. Labeled fibers penetrated the cranium adjacent to the trigeminal ganglion, but they did not follow the trigeminal nerve fibers into the brain stem. Rather, after entering the cranium, they projected caudally to their usual site of entrance and proceeded towards their normal targets. This rostral deviation of the facial nerve was observed only after surgery at 48-72 h of incubation, but not in cases with early otocyst removal (38-48 h). A rostral deviation of the facial nerve was seen in cases with partial otocyst removal when the vestibular nerve was absent. The facial nerve followed its normal course when the vestibular nerve persisted. We conclude that disruption of the developing facial pathway altered the routes of navigating axons, but did not prevent pathfinding and innervation of the normal targets. Pathfinding abilities may not be restricted to pioneering axons of the facial nerve; later-developing facial nerve fibers also appeared to have positional information. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that navigating axons may respond to multiple guidance cues during development. These cues appear to differ as a function of position of the navigating axon.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Innervation of the cirri in three teleost species (Hypsoblennius gilberti, Hypsoblennius gentilis, Oxylebius pictus) was investigated with the use of HRP- and cobalttracing techniques. All projections were found to be ipsilateral. Labeled cells were demonstrated in both portions of the trigeminal ganglion and in the facial ganglion. Cirrus nerve fibers running in the trigeminal nerve project to terminal fields in an isthmic sensory trigeminal nucleus, to areas adjacent to the descending trigeminal root in the brainstem, and to the medial funicular nucleus in the medulla. Distribution of labeled cells in the trigeminal ganglion complex suggests a functional distinction of the two ganglion portions. Cirrus nerve fibers belonging to the facial nerve terminate in a circumscribed part of of the facial lobe, indicating a somatotopic projection. Pathways were principally the same in all three species investigated. Findings of facial innervation of teleost cirri suggest a suspected gustatory function of teleost head appendages.  相似文献   

12.
Gram-positive bacteria entering the dentinal tissue during the carious process are suspected to influence the immune response in human dental pulp. Odontoblasts situated at the pulp/dentin interface are the first cells encountered by these bacteria and therefore could play a crucial role in this response. In the present study, we found that in vitro-differentiated odontoblasts constitutively expressed the pattern recognition receptor TLR1-6 and 9 genes but not TLR7, 8, and 10. Furthermore, lipoteichoic acid (LTA), a wall component of Gram-positive bacteria, triggered the activation of the odontoblasts. LTA up-regulated the expression of its own receptor TLR2, as well as the production of several chemokines. In particular, an increased amount of CCL2 and CXCL10 was detected in supernatants from LTA-stimulated odontoblasts, and those supernatants augmented the migration of immature dendritic cells in vitro compared with controls. Clinical relevance of these observations came from immunohistochemical analysis showing that CCL2 was expressed in vivo by odontoblasts and blood vessels present under active carious lesions but not in healthy dental pulps. In contrast with this inflammatory response, gene expression of major dentin matrix components (type I collagen, dentin sialophosphoprotein) and TGF-beta1 was sharply down-regulated in odontoblasts by LTA. Taken together, these data suggest that odontoblasts activated through TLR2 by Gram-positive bacteria LTA are able to initiate an innate immune response by secreting chemokines that recruit immature dendritic cells while down-regulating their specialized functions of dentin matrix synthesis and mineralization.  相似文献   

13.
We have used immunocytochemistry to analyse expression of nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR) in developing, aging and injured molar teeth of rats. The patterns of NGFR immunoreactivity (IR) in developing epithelia and mesenchyme matched the location of NGFR mRNA assayed by in situ hybridization with a complementary S35-labeled RNA probe. The following categories of NGFR expression were found. (1) There was NGFR-IR in the dental lamina epithelium and in adjacent mesenchyme during early stages of third molar formation. (2) NGFR-IR nerve fibers were posterior and close to the bud epithelium. (3) During crown morphogenesis NGFR expression was prominent in internal enamel epithelium and preodontoblasts; it faded as preameloblasts elongated and as odontoblasts began to make predentin matrix; and it was weak or absent from outer enamel epithelium, the cervical loop, and differentiated ameloblasts and odontoblasts. (4) When NGFR-IR nerve fibers entered the molars late in the bell stage, they innervated the most mature peripheral pulp and dentin in an asymmetric pattern which correlated more with asymmetric enamel synthesis than with mesenchymal NGFR-IR distribution. (5) The mesenchymal pulp cells continued to have intense NGFR expression in adult teeth, especially near coronal tubular dentin. (6) The pulpal NGFR-IR decreased in very old rats or subjacent to reparative dentin (naturally occurring or experimentally induced). (7) During root formation, the preodontoblasts had NGFR-IR but most root mesenchymal cells and Hertwig's epithelial root sheath did not. This work suggests that there are important epithelial and mesenchymal targets of NGF regulation during molar morphogenesis that differ for crown and root development and that do not correlate with neural development. The continuing expression of NGFR-IR by pulpal mesenchymal cells in adult rats was most intense near coronal odontoblasts making tubular dentin; and it was lost during aging, or subjacent to sites of dentin injury that caused a phenotypic change in the odontoblast layer.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The origin of nerve fibers to the superficial temporal artery of the rat was studied by retrograde tracing with the fluorescent dye True Blue (TB). Application of TB to the rat superficial temporal artery labeled perikarya in the superior cervical ganglion, the otic ganglion, the sphenopalatine ganglion, the jugular-nodose ganglionic complex, and the trigeminal ganglion. The labeled perikarya were located in ipsilateral ganglia; a few neuronal somata were, in addition, seen in contralateral ganglia. Judging from the number of labeled nerve cell bodies the majority of fibers contributing to the perivascular innervation originate from the superior cervical, sphenopalatine and trigeminal ganglia. A moderate labeling was seen in the otic ganglion, whereas only few perikarya were labeled in the jugular-nodose ganglionic complex. Furthermore, TB-labeled perikarya were examined for the presence of neuropeptides. In the superior cervical ganglion, all TB-labeled nerve cell bodies contained neuropeptide Y. In the sphenopalatine and otic ganglia, the majority of the labeled perikarya were endowed with vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. In the trigeminal ganglion, the majority of the TB-labeled nerve cell bodies displayed calcitonin gene-related peptide, while a small population of the TB-labeled neuronal elements contained, in addition, substance P. In conclusion, these findings indicate that the majority of peptide-containing nerve fibers to the superficial temporal artery originate in ipsilateral cranial ganglia; a few fibers, however, may originate in contralateral ganglia.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution and origin of substance P (SP) and neurokinin A (NKA) were studied in rat in the anterior buccal glands, which are minor mucous salivary glands. Indirect immunofluorescence staining showed moderate SP and NKA innervation of salivary acini and interlobular ducts, whereas blood vessels were more sparsely innervated, and there were few nerve fibers in the stroma and around the intralobular ducts. About 10%–20% of the trigeminal ganglion cells showed equally strong immunoreactivity to both SP and NKA. Unilateral denervation of the branches of the trigeminal nerve caused complete disappearance of the stromal fibers and greatly reduced the number of all other SP-immunoreactive and NKA-immunoreactive nerve fibers. In the superior cervical ganglia, SP and NKA immunoreactivity was restricted to small intensely fluorescent cells; SP and NKA immunoreactivity was absent from principal ganglionic cells, and thus sympathectomy had no any effect on the number or distribution of fibers immunoreactive for SP and NKA in the anterior buccal glands. The fibers remaining after sensory denervation could have been of parasympathetic origin, indicating a dual origin of nerves immunoreactive for SP and NKA in these glands. The present data demonstrate that the major part of the glandular SP and NKA innervation in the minor salivary glands derives from the trigeminal ganglia. The distribution of the peripheral nerve fibers indicates that they may play a role in the delivery of potent neuropeptides involved in the vascular, secretory, and motor (myoepithelial cells) functions of salivary glands.  相似文献   

16.
Matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein (MEPE) is an extracellular matrix protein that is mainly expressed in mineralizing tissues, including the dental pulp. The purposes of this study were to clarify the localization of MEPE in the tooth germ and to investigate the roles of MEPE in the differentiation of odontoblasts. The immunohistochemical staining in the tooth germ of the upper first molars of male Wistar rats (postnatal day 3) revealed that MEPE was mainly localized in odontoblasts during dentinogenesis. Stable MEPE-overexpressing and MEPE-knockdown cell lines, which were established in odontoblast-lineage cells (OLCs), showed lower and higher differentiation capabilities, respectively. Eukaryotic proteins of the N-terminal fragment of MEPE produced in HEK cells had no effect on the differentiation of OLCs, whereas the C-terminal fragment containing an RGD sequence inhibited their differentiation. These results indicated that the C-terminal fragment of MEPE containing an RGD sequence, cleaved in odontoblasts, appeared to be the active form of MEPE, which may play important roles in dentinogenesis and pulpal homeostasis by keeping the odontoblasts in immature condition.  相似文献   

17.
The ultrastructure of the inner dental epithelial cells (IDE) and odontoblasts in elasmobranch (Raja erinacae) tooth buds was investigated by transmission electron microscopy to determine what contribution each cell type makes to the forming enameloid matrix. Row II, early stage, IDE cells contained few organelles associated with protein synthesis, whereas preodontoblasts appeared competent to initiate extracellular matrix production. Row III IDE cells are also devoid of organelles related to secretory protein synthesis, although these IDE cells accumulated large pools of intracellular glycogen. The glycogen appeared to be packaged into vesicles and exocytosed into the lateral extracellular space toward the forming enameloid matrix. Row III odontoblasts had a morphology consistent with an active protein secretory cell. No procollagen granules were present within the odontoblasts, however, nor were many collagen fibers observed in the enameloid matrix. Instead, non-collagenous "giant" fibers having 17.5-nm periodic cross striations were associated with the invaginations of odontoblast cell processes. Giant fibers, which spanned a clear zone adjacent to the odontoblasts, terminated within the enameloid matrix. Smaller 25-nm-wide "unit" fibers emanated from the giant fiber tips to form the bulk of the enameloid matrix. The clear zone, which separated the odontoblasts from the enameloid matrix at early stages, diminished in size at later stages until the odontoblast processes were completely embedded in the enameloid matrix. Nascent enameloid crystallites were observed only after a layer of unmineralized predentin was deposited beneath fully formed enameloid matrix. The results suggest that the major constituent of the enameloid matrix in skates is a non-collagenous protein derived from the odontoblasts. The inner dental epithelial cells appear to contribute large quantities of carbohydrates to the forming enameloid matrix.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Odontoblasts are highly specialized cells aligned at the edge of the dental pulp. As a step towards understanding the complex mechanisms underlying their terminal differentiation, the gene expression pattern was examined in human cultured odontoblast cells. Suppression substractive hybridization (SSH) was used to establish a substracted cDNA library specific for human odontoblasts. For this purpose, cDNAs from human cultured fibroblastic pulp cells were substracted to cDNA from human cultured odontoblasts. The nucleotide sequence of 154 substracted cDNA clones was determined. We identified 130 preferentially expressed gene fragments in odontoblasts as compared with the fibroblastic pulp cells. Ten of them were already identified in odontoblasts such as DSPP, BSP, enamelysin and Col1A1. We confirmed their overexpression by RT-PCR on the cultured cells and in vivo by in situ hybridization on human molars. Another 64 clones corresponded to known genes. Among them, two clones were of particular interest: reelin, which was first detected in the brain and osteoadherin, which was first located in bone. Fifty-six clones were unknown genes even though 82% matched expressed sequence tags or genomic clones. A reverse Northern dot blot showed that 96% of them were overexpressed at different rates in cultured odontoblasts. These latest results indicate that there are still unknown genes that are associated with the control of the odontoblast phenotype. Thus, cloning of odontoblast differentiation-associated genes not only opens up new methods of elucidating the normal development but also the recruitment of odontoblasts when required to initiate repair of dentin.  相似文献   

20.
The tooth pulp innervation originates from the trigeminal ganglion (TG) and represents an illustrative example of tissue targeting by sensory nerves. Pulpal fibroblasts strongly promote neurite outgrowth from TG neurons in vitro. In the present study, we have investigated the possible participation of laminins (LNs), potent neuritogenic extracellular matrix components. Immunohistochemistry of human tooth pulp demonstrated expression of LN alpha1, alpha2, alpha4, alpha5, beta1 and gamma1, and laminin-binding integrin alpha3, alpha6, beta1 and beta4 chains in nerves. Though faintly stained for laminins in situ, pulpal fibroblasts reacted, once cultured and permeabilized, with antibodies to LN alpha2, alpha4, beta1 and gamma1 chains by flow cytometry. The cells also expressed the corresponding mRNAs and were able to assemble and secrete LN-2 (alpha2beta1gamma1, Lm-211) and LN-8 (alpha4beta1gamma1, Lm-411). LN-8 displayed a chondroitin sulphate (CS) modification in its alpha4 chain. In functional assays, mouse LN-1 (alpha1beta1gamma1, Lm-111) and recombinant human (rh) LN-8, but not native or rhLN-2, strongly promoted neurite outgrowth from TG neurons, mimicking the effect of cultured pulp fibroblast. Altogether, the results indicate that LN-2 and LN-8 are synthesized by tooth pulp fibroblasts and differentially promote neurite outgrowth from TG neurons. LN-8 may contribute to sensory innervation of teeth and other tissues during development and/or regeneration.  相似文献   

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