4.3 Article

Temporal Analysis of Ectopic Enamel Production in Incisors From Sprouty Mutant Mice

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WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.21254

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Funding

  1. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [304/07/0223]
  2. Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic [AVOZ 503905512]
  3. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic [MSM 0021620843, COST B23.002]
  4. U.C.S.F Sandler Family Foundation [K08-DE017654]

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The mouse incisor has two unusual features: it grows continuously and it is covered by enamel exclusively on the labial side. The continuous growth is driven in part by epithelial stem cells in the cervical loop region that can both self-renew and give rise to ameloblasts. We have previously reported that ectopic enamel is found on the lingual side of the incisor in mice with loss-of-function of sprouty (spry) genes. Spry2(+/-); Spiy4(-/-) mice, in which three sprouty alleles have been inactivated, have ectopic enamel as a result of upregulation of epithelial-mesenchymal FGF signaling in the lingual part of the cervical loop. Interestingly, lingual enamel is also present in the early postnatal period in Spry4(-/-) mice, in which only two sprouty alleles have been inactivated, but ectopic enamel is not found in adults of this genotype. To explore the mechanisms underlying the disappearance of lingual enamel in Spiy4(-/-) adults, we studied the fate of the lingual enamel in Spiy4(-/-) mice by comparing the morphology and growth of their lower incisors with wild type and Spiy2(+/-); Spiy4(-/-) mice at several timepoints between the perinatal period and adulthood. Ameloblasts and enamel were detected on the lingual side in postnatal Spiy2(+/-), Spry4(-/-) incisors. By contrast, new ectopic ameloblasts ceased to differentiate after postnatal day 3 in Spry4(-/-) incisors, which was followed by a progressive loss of lingual enamel. Both the posterior extent of lingual enamel and the time of its last deposition were variable early postnatally in Spry4(-/-) incisors, but in all Spry4(-/-) adult incisors the lingual enamel was ultimately lost through continuous growth and abrasion of the incisor. J. Exp. Zool. (Mol. Dev. Evol.) 312B:473-485, 2009. (C) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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