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THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL

Electron microscope and electron diffraction studies of developing embryonic bovine enamel have revealed the organization of the organic matrix and the inorganic crystals. The most recently deposited inorganic crystals located at the ameloblast-enamel junction are thin plates, approximately 1300 A l...

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Autores principales: Travis, Dorothy F., Glimcher, Melvin J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1964
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2106542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14245432
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author Travis, Dorothy F.
Glimcher, Melvin J.
author_facet Travis, Dorothy F.
Glimcher, Melvin J.
author_sort Travis, Dorothy F.
collection PubMed
description Electron microscope and electron diffraction studies of developing embryonic bovine enamel have revealed the organization of the organic matrix and the inorganic crystals. The most recently deposited inorganic crystals located at the ameloblast-enamel junction are thin plates, approximately 1300 A long, 400 A wide, and 19 A thick. During maturation of the enamel, crystal growth occurs primarily by an increase in crystal thickness. Statistical analyses failed to show a significant change in either the width or the length of the crystals during the period of maturation studied. Even in the earliest stages of calcification, the crystals are organized within the prisms so that their long axes (c-axes) are oriented parallel to the long axes of the prisms but randomly distributed about their long axes. With maturation of the enamel, the crystals become more densely packed and more highly oriented within the prisms. The organic matrix in decalcified sections of enamel is strikingly similar in its over-all organization to that of the fully mineralized tissue. When viewed in longitudinal prism profiles, the intraprismatic organic matrix is composed of relatively thin dense lines, approximately 48 A wide, which are relatively parallel to each other and have their fiber axes parallel to the long axes of the prisms within which they are located. Many of these dense lines, which have the appearance of thin filaments, are organized into doublets, the individual 48 A wide filaments of the doublets being separated by approximately 120 A. When observed in oblique prism profiles, the intraprismatic organic matrix is likewise remarkably similar in general orientation and organization to that of the fully mineralized tissue. Moreover, the spaces between adjacent doublets or between single filaments have the appearance of compartments. These compartments, more clearly visualized in cross- or near cross-sectional prism profiles, are oval or near oval in shape. Therefore, the appearance of the intraprismatic organic matrix (in longitudinal, oblique, and cross-sectional prism profiles) indicates that it is organized into tubular sheaths which are oriented with their long axes parallel to the long axes of the prisms in which they are located, but randomly oriented about their own long axes, an orientation again remarkably "blue printing" that of the inorganic crystals. The predominant feature of the walls of the tubular sheaths, when viewed in cross- or near cross-section, is that of continuous sheets, although in many cases closely packed dot-like structures of approximately 48 A were also observed, suggesting that the wall of the sheaths consists of a series of closely packed filaments. The 48 A wide dense lines (filaments) representing the width of the sheath wall were resolved into two dense strands when viewed in longitudinal prism profiles. Each strand was 12 A wide and was separated by a less electron-dense space 17 A wide. The intraprismatic organic matrix is surrounded by a prism sheath which corresponds in mineralized sections to the electron-lucent uncalcified regions separating adjacent prisms. Structurally, the prism sheaths appear to consist of filaments arranged in basket-weave fashion.
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spelling pubmed-21065422008-05-01 THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL Travis, Dorothy F. Glimcher, Melvin J. J Cell Biol Article Electron microscope and electron diffraction studies of developing embryonic bovine enamel have revealed the organization of the organic matrix and the inorganic crystals. The most recently deposited inorganic crystals located at the ameloblast-enamel junction are thin plates, approximately 1300 A long, 400 A wide, and 19 A thick. During maturation of the enamel, crystal growth occurs primarily by an increase in crystal thickness. Statistical analyses failed to show a significant change in either the width or the length of the crystals during the period of maturation studied. Even in the earliest stages of calcification, the crystals are organized within the prisms so that their long axes (c-axes) are oriented parallel to the long axes of the prisms but randomly distributed about their long axes. With maturation of the enamel, the crystals become more densely packed and more highly oriented within the prisms. The organic matrix in decalcified sections of enamel is strikingly similar in its over-all organization to that of the fully mineralized tissue. When viewed in longitudinal prism profiles, the intraprismatic organic matrix is composed of relatively thin dense lines, approximately 48 A wide, which are relatively parallel to each other and have their fiber axes parallel to the long axes of the prisms within which they are located. Many of these dense lines, which have the appearance of thin filaments, are organized into doublets, the individual 48 A wide filaments of the doublets being separated by approximately 120 A. When observed in oblique prism profiles, the intraprismatic organic matrix is likewise remarkably similar in general orientation and organization to that of the fully mineralized tissue. Moreover, the spaces between adjacent doublets or between single filaments have the appearance of compartments. These compartments, more clearly visualized in cross- or near cross-sectional prism profiles, are oval or near oval in shape. Therefore, the appearance of the intraprismatic organic matrix (in longitudinal, oblique, and cross-sectional prism profiles) indicates that it is organized into tubular sheaths which are oriented with their long axes parallel to the long axes of the prisms in which they are located, but randomly oriented about their own long axes, an orientation again remarkably "blue printing" that of the inorganic crystals. The predominant feature of the walls of the tubular sheaths, when viewed in cross- or near cross-section, is that of continuous sheets, although in many cases closely packed dot-like structures of approximately 48 A were also observed, suggesting that the wall of the sheaths consists of a series of closely packed filaments. The 48 A wide dense lines (filaments) representing the width of the sheath wall were resolved into two dense strands when viewed in longitudinal prism profiles. Each strand was 12 A wide and was separated by a less electron-dense space 17 A wide. The intraprismatic organic matrix is surrounded by a prism sheath which corresponds in mineralized sections to the electron-lucent uncalcified regions separating adjacent prisms. Structurally, the prism sheaths appear to consist of filaments arranged in basket-weave fashion. The Rockefeller University Press 1964-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2106542/ /pubmed/14245432 Text en Copyright © 1964 by The Rockefeller Institute Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Travis, Dorothy F.
Glimcher, Melvin J.
THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL
title THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL
title_full THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL
title_fullStr THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL
title_full_unstemmed THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL
title_short THE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION OF, AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ORGANIC MATRIX AND THE INORGANIC CRYSTALS OF EMBRYONIC BOVINE ENAMEL
title_sort structure and organization of, and the relationship between the organic matrix and the inorganic crystals of embryonic bovine enamel
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2106542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14245432
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