| Literature DB >> 24970041 |
Mayssam Khaddam1, Eric Huet2, Benoît Vallée2, Morad Bensidhoum3, Dominique Le Denmat1, Anna Filatova4, Lucia Jimenez-Rojo4, Sandy Ribes1, Georg Lorenz5, Maria Morawietz5, Gael Y Rochefort1, Andreas Kiesow5, Thimios A Mitsiadis4, Anne Poliard1, Matthias Petzold5, Eric E Gabison6, Suzanne Menashi2, Catherine Chaussain7.
Abstract
Tooth development is regulated by a series of reciprocal inductive signaling between the dental epithelium and mesenchyme, which culminates with the formation of dentin and enamel. EMMPRIN/CD147 is an Extracellular Matrix MetalloPRoteinase (MMP) INducer that mediates epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in cancer and other pathological processes and is expressed in developing teeth. Here we used EMMPRIN knockout (KO) mice to determine the functional role of EMMPRIN on dental tissue formation. We report a delay in enamel deposition and formation that is clearly distinguishable in the growing incisor and associated with a significant reduction of MMP-3 and MMP-20 expression in tooth germs of KO mice. Insufficient basement membrane degradation is evidenced by a persistent laminin immunostaining, resulting in a delay of both odontoblast and ameloblast differentiation. Consequently, enamel volume and thickness are decreased in adult mutant teeth but enamel maturation and tooth morphology are normal, as shown by micro-computed tomographic (micro-CT), nanoindentation, and scanning electron microscope analyses. In addition, the dentino-enamel junction appears as a rough calcified layer of approximately 10±5μm thick (mean±SD) in both molars and growing incisors of KO adult mice. These results indicate that EMMPRIN is involved in the epithelial-mesenchymal cross-talk during tooth development by regulating the expression of MMPs. The mild tooth phenotype observed in EMMPRIN KO mice suggests that the direct effect of EMMPRIN may be limited to a short time window, comprised between basement membrane degradation allowing direct cell contact and calcified matrix deposition.Entities:
Keywords: Cell interaction; Enamel proteins; MMPs; Tooth formation
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24970041 DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2014.06.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone ISSN: 1873-2763 Impact factor: 4.398