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Characterization of glycosaminoglycans during tooth development and mineralization in the axolotl, Ambystoma mexicanum
Authors:Wistuba J  Völker W  Ehmcke J  Clemen G
Institution:Institute of Animal Evolution and Ecology, University of Münster, Hüfferstrasse 1, D-48129 Münster, Germany. wistuba@uni-muenster.de
Abstract:Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) involved in the formation of the teeth of Ambystoma mexicanum were located and characterized with the cuprolinic blue (CB) staining method and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Glycosaminoglycan-cuprolinic blue precipitates (GAGCB) were found in different compartments of the mineralizing tissue. Various populations of elongated GAGCB could be discriminated both according to their size and their preferential distribution in the extracellular matrix (ECM). GAGCB populations that differ in their composition could be attributed not only to the compartments of the ECM but also to different zones and to different tooth types (early-larval and transformed). Larger precipitates were only observed within the dentine matrix of the shaft of the early-larval tooth. The composition of the populations differed significantly between the regions of the transformed tooth: pedicel, shaft and dividing zone. In later stages of tooth formation, small-sized GAGCBs were seen as intracellular deposits in the ameloblasts. It is concluded that the composition of GAGCB populations seems to play a role in the mineralization processes during tooth development in A. mexicanum and influence qualitative characteristics of the mineral in different tooth types and zones, and it is suggested that GAGs might be resorbed by the enamel epithelium during the late phase of enamel formation.
Keywords:Glycosaminoglycans  Cuprolinic blue  Extracellular matrix  Teeth  Ambystoma mexicanum
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