Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3121643 Archives of Oral Biology 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryObjectivesThe aim of this study is to clarify the functional significance of heat-shock protein (HSP)-25 during tooth development.DesignWe compared the expression of HSP-25 in the dental epithelial and mesenchymal cells with their proliferative activity during odontogenesis in rat molars on postnatal days 1–100 by immunohistochemistry using anti-HSP-25 and anti-5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine (BrdU) for cell proliferation assay.ResultsOn day 1, BrdU-immunoreactive cells were densely located in the inner enamel epithelium in the cervical loop and inter-cusped areas and the dental pulp adjacent to them, whereas HSP-25-immunoractivity (IR) was restricted to the cusped area where odontoblasts and ameloblasts had already differentiated. Subsequently, BrdU-IR shifted in the apical direction to be localized around Hertwig's epithelial root sheath during days 5–30, never overlapping with concomitantly apically-shifted HSP-25-IR. On days 60–100, BrdU-immunoreactive cells were hardly recognizable in the dental pulp, where HSP-25-IR was exclusively localized in the odontoblast layer. Furthermore, the odontoblast- and ameloblast-lineage cells exhibited two steps in the expression of HSP-25 throughout the postnatal stages: first, dental epithelial and pulpal mesenchymal cells showed a weak IR for HSP-25 after the cessation of their proliferative activity, and subsequently odontoblasts and ameloblasts consistently expressed an intense HSP-25-IR.ConclusionOdontoblast- and ameloblast-lineage cells acquire HSP-25-IR after they complete their cell division, suggesting that this protein acts as a switch between cell proliferation and differentiation during tooth development. The consistent expression of HSP-25-IR in the formative cells may be involved in the maintenance of their functional integrity.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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