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Immunohistochemical localization of nerve growth factor (NGF) and NGF receptor (NGF-R) in the developing first molar tooth of the rat 总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9
Thimios A. Mitsiadis Eleni Dicou Annick Joffre Henri Magloire 《Differentiation; research in biological diversity》1992,49(1):47-61
Nerve growth factor (NGF) is a well established target-derived trophic factor supporting sympathetic and sensory innervation in the peripheral tissues as well as cholinergic innervation in the brain. Despite its name, NGF may have broader biological functions early in development in a wide range of non-neuronal differentiating cells. The many effects of NGF are directly dependent on initial binding of NGF to specific plasma membrane receptors on target cells. Here we use immunohistochemical methods to show that NGF and its receptor (NGF-R) are localized in a variety of embryonic epithelial and mesenchymal cells in the rat developing molar tooth. Dental cells known to play important roles in morphogenesis and inductive tissue interactions show NGF-like reactivity. Thus, labelling is seen in epithelial preameloblasts and mesenchymal odontoblasts. We also show a transient expression of NGF-R in restricted parts of the dental epithelium (inner dental epithelium) and dental mesenchyme differentiating cells (post-mitotic, polarizing odontoblasts). The expression patterns of NGF are different to those of NGF-R during embryogenesis and this is illustrated in detail in the developing tooth. The histochemical findings reported here support the notion that NGF may have multiple roles during morphogenetic and cytodifferentiation events in the tooth. 相似文献
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Pitx1 is a bicoid-related homeodomain factor that exhibits preferential expression in the developing hindlimb, mandible, pituitary gland and teeth. Pitx1 gene-deleted mice exhibit striking abnormalities in morphogenesis and growth of both hindlimb and mandible, suggesting a proliferative defect in these two structures. Here, we studied the expression and regulation of Pitx1 in both mandible and developing teeth and analyzed tooth morphology, cell proliferation, apoptosis and expression of Pitx2, Barx1 and Tbx1 in dental tissues of Pitx1−/− mouse embryos. Pitx1 expression is restricted to the epithelium of the growing tooth anlagen. Tissue recombination and bead implantation experiments demonstrated that bone morphogenetic protein-4 down-regulates Pitx1 expression in both mandibular mesenchyme and dental epithelium. Deletion of the Pitx1 locus results in micrognathia and abnormal morphology of the mandibular molars. Although Pitx2 expression in teeth of Pitx1−/− embryos is not altered, expression of Barx1 decreased in the mesenchyme of the mandibular molars. Furthermore, Pitx1 deletion results in suppression of Tbx1 expression in dental epithelium. Taken together, these results indicate that independent genetic pathways in mandibular and maxillary processes determine tooth development and morphology. 相似文献
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Mutations in the human Notch 3 gene cause the vascular stroke and dementia syndrome CADASIL (Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy) characterized by degeneration of vascular smooth muscle cells and multiple small infarcts in the white and deep gray matter of the brain. Here we have analyzed the expression pattern of the Notch 3 gene in the pre- and postnatal mouse brain. Prenatal Notch 3 expression is restricted to a scattered population of cells within the vessel wall of all major blood vessels in the developing embryo, including those that form the perineural vascular plexus. Expression in the postnatal brain is confined to a scattered cell population within the vessel wall of small to medium-sized penetrating arteries, which are the vessel type primarily affected in CADASIL patients. In contrast, no expression was observed in capillaries and veins. Notch 3 is most likely expressed in a subset of vascular smooth muscle cells, and the expression pattern of one of the Notch ligands, Serrate 1, was very similar to that observed for Notch 3. The Notch 3 expressing pattern was not significantly altered in platelet-derived growth factor B- (PDGF-B) deficient mouse embryos, demonstrating that Notch 3 expression is not under direct control of PDGF-B. These data show that Notch 3 expression is conserved between mouse and human and suggest that the mouse is a valid system for analysis of CADASIL. 相似文献