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Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development

Dental enamel development occurs in stages. The ameloblast cell layer is adjacent to, and is responsible for, enamel formation. When rodent pre-ameloblasts become tall columnar secretory-stage ameloblasts, they secrete enamel matrix proteins, and the ameloblasts start moving in rows that slide by on...

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Autores principales: Bartlett, John D., Dobeck, Justine M., Tye, Coralee E., Perez-Moreno, Mirna, Stokes, Nicole, Reynolds, Albert B., Fuchs, Elaine, Skobe, Ziedonis
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2940824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20862276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012703
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author Bartlett, John D.
Dobeck, Justine M.
Tye, Coralee E.
Perez-Moreno, Mirna
Stokes, Nicole
Reynolds, Albert B.
Fuchs, Elaine
Skobe, Ziedonis
author_facet Bartlett, John D.
Dobeck, Justine M.
Tye, Coralee E.
Perez-Moreno, Mirna
Stokes, Nicole
Reynolds, Albert B.
Fuchs, Elaine
Skobe, Ziedonis
author_sort Bartlett, John D.
collection PubMed
description Dental enamel development occurs in stages. The ameloblast cell layer is adjacent to, and is responsible for, enamel formation. When rodent pre-ameloblasts become tall columnar secretory-stage ameloblasts, they secrete enamel matrix proteins, and the ameloblasts start moving in rows that slide by one another. This movement is necessary to form the characteristic decussating enamel prism pattern. Thus, a dynamic system of intercellular interactions is required for proper enamel development. Cadherins are components of the adherens junction (AJ), and they span the cell membrane to mediate attachment to adjacent cells. p120 stabilizes cadherins by preventing their internalization and degradation. So, we asked if p120-mediated cadherin stability is important for dental enamel formation. Targeted p120 ablation in the mouse enamel organ had a striking effect. Secretory stage ameloblasts detached from surrounding tissues, lost polarity, flattened, and ameloblast E- and N-cadherin expression became undetectable by immunostaining. The enamel itself was poorly mineralized and appeared to be composed of a thin layer of merged spheres that abraded from the tooth. Significantly, p120 mosaic mouse teeth were capable of forming normal enamel demonstrating that the enamel defects were not a secondary effect of p120 ablation. Surprisingly, blood-filled sinusoids developed in random locations around the developing teeth. This has not been observed in other p120-ablated tissues and may be due to altered p120-mediated cell signaling. These data reveal a critical role for p120 in tooth and dental enamel development and are consistent with p120 directing the attachment and detachment of the secretory stage ameloblasts as they move in rows.
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spelling pubmed-29408242010-09-22 Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development Bartlett, John D. Dobeck, Justine M. Tye, Coralee E. Perez-Moreno, Mirna Stokes, Nicole Reynolds, Albert B. Fuchs, Elaine Skobe, Ziedonis PLoS One Research Article Dental enamel development occurs in stages. The ameloblast cell layer is adjacent to, and is responsible for, enamel formation. When rodent pre-ameloblasts become tall columnar secretory-stage ameloblasts, they secrete enamel matrix proteins, and the ameloblasts start moving in rows that slide by one another. This movement is necessary to form the characteristic decussating enamel prism pattern. Thus, a dynamic system of intercellular interactions is required for proper enamel development. Cadherins are components of the adherens junction (AJ), and they span the cell membrane to mediate attachment to adjacent cells. p120 stabilizes cadherins by preventing their internalization and degradation. So, we asked if p120-mediated cadherin stability is important for dental enamel formation. Targeted p120 ablation in the mouse enamel organ had a striking effect. Secretory stage ameloblasts detached from surrounding tissues, lost polarity, flattened, and ameloblast E- and N-cadherin expression became undetectable by immunostaining. The enamel itself was poorly mineralized and appeared to be composed of a thin layer of merged spheres that abraded from the tooth. Significantly, p120 mosaic mouse teeth were capable of forming normal enamel demonstrating that the enamel defects were not a secondary effect of p120 ablation. Surprisingly, blood-filled sinusoids developed in random locations around the developing teeth. This has not been observed in other p120-ablated tissues and may be due to altered p120-mediated cell signaling. These data reveal a critical role for p120 in tooth and dental enamel development and are consistent with p120 directing the attachment and detachment of the secretory stage ameloblasts as they move in rows. Public Library of Science 2010-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2940824/ /pubmed/20862276 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012703 Text en Bartlett et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bartlett, John D.
Dobeck, Justine M.
Tye, Coralee E.
Perez-Moreno, Mirna
Stokes, Nicole
Reynolds, Albert B.
Fuchs, Elaine
Skobe, Ziedonis
Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development
title Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development
title_full Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development
title_fullStr Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development
title_full_unstemmed Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development
title_short Targeted p120-Catenin Ablation Disrupts Dental Enamel Development
title_sort targeted p120-catenin ablation disrupts dental enamel development
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2940824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20862276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012703
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