Literature DB >> 282288

The nature and nurture of epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during tooth morphogenesis.

H C Slavkin.   

Abstract

Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during tooth morphogenesis are inductive and instructive developmental processes as well as permissive and regulatory processes. Data is available to support the early influences of enamel organ epithelium upon a responding mesenchyme in the determination of dental morphogenetic fields (Dryburg, 1967; Miller, 1969). Mesenchymal specificity appears to be operant during tooth shape and form and during the induction of secretary amelogenesis (Kollar, 1972). These heterotypic tissue interactions can be observed in vivo and in vitro. The cellular responses to these interactions appear to be transcriptional, translational and post-translational; as a direct consequence of the interactions, new gene products are synthesized and secreted and/or pre-existing gene products are amplified (Hata and Slavkin, 1978). The mechanism(s) by which epithelial-mesenchymal interactions function may best be learned through critical investigations of differentiation alloantigens, receptors, coupling components within the plasma membrane, translating components by which epigenetic external cues become internal chemical information, and the associations between peripheral and integral proteins within the plasma membrane and intracytoplasmic microfilaments and microtubules.

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Year:  1978        PMID: 282288

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Buccale        ISSN: 0301-3952


  4 in total

1.  Cultured incisors display major modifications in basal lamina deposition without further effect on odontoblast differentiation.

Authors:  J M Meyer; J V Ruch; M D Kubler; C Kupferle; H Lesot
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1995-01       Impact factor: 5.249

2.  Developmental comparisons of murine secretory amelogenesis in vivo, as xenografts on the chick chorio-allantoic membrane, and in vitro.

Authors:  M Yamada; P Bringas; M Grodin; M MacDougall; H C Slavkin
Journal:  Calcif Tissue Int       Date:  1980       Impact factor: 4.333

3.  Neonatal hamster molar tooth development: extraction and characterization of amelogenins, enamelins, and soluble dentin proteins.

Authors:  D M Lyaruu; A Belcourt; A G Fincham; J D Termine
Journal:  Calcif Tissue Int       Date:  1982-01       Impact factor: 4.333

4.  Possible functions of mesenchyme cell-derived fibronectin during formation of basal lamina.

Authors:  A G Brownell; C C Bessem; H C Slavkin
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1981-06       Impact factor: 11.205

  4 in total

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