3.8 Article

Timing of Mouse Molar Formation Is Independent of Jaw Length Including Retromolar Space

期刊

JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
卷 9, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jdb9010008

关键词

tooth development; molar initiation; craniodental integration; 3D imaging; synchrotron scanning

资金

  1. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
  3. National Research Council (NRC)
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  5. NSERC [2011-402148, 2016-05177, 2014-05563]
  6. CFI Research Infrastucture Grant [29037]
  7. NSERC
  8. College of Medicine (USask)
  9. NSERC Undergraduate Summer Research Awards
  10. USask College of Medicine
  11. CHIR-Techniques in Health Research Using Synchrotron Tools
  12. Government of Saskatchewan

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research suggests that the initiation time and developmental duration of molars in the upper and lower jaws are comparable, despite differences in retromolar space and molar sizes. This indicates that the timing of molar formation may not be influenced by jaw length and space, but rather by conditions within the dental lamina. The physical reorganization of dental epithelium and its impact on underlying mesenchyme may play a crucial role in molar onset.
For humans and other mammals to eat effectively, teeth must develop properly inside the jaw. Deciphering craniodental integration is central to explaining the timely formation of permanent molars, including third molars which are often impacted in humans, and to clarifying how teeth and jaws fit, function and evolve together. A factor long-posited to influence molar onset time is the jaw space available for each molar organ to form within. Here, we tested whether each successive molar initiates only after a minimum threshold of space is created via jaw growth. We used synchrotron-based micro-CT scanning to assess developing molars in situ within jaws of C57BL/6J mice aged E10 to P32, encompassing molar onset to emergence. We compared total jaw, retromolar and molar lengths, and molar onset times, between upper and lower jaws. Initiation time and developmental duration were comparable between molar upper and lower counterparts despite shorter, slower-growing retromolar space in the upper jaw, and despite size differences between upper and lower molars. Timing of molar formation appears unmoved by jaw length including space. Conditions within the dental lamina likely influence molar onset much more than surrounding jaw tissues. We theorize that molar initiation is contingent on sufficient surface area for the physical reorganization of dental epithelium and its invagination of underlying mesenchyme.

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