| Literature DB >> 28392452 |
Shai Abehsera1, Shani Peles2, Jenny Tynyakov3, Shmuel Bentov4, Eliahu D Aflalo1, Shihao Li5, Fuhua Li5, Jianhai Xiang5, Amir Sagi6.
Abstract
Vertical organizations of skeletal elements are found in various vertebrate teeth and invertebrate exoskeletons. The molecular mechanism behind the development of such structural organizations is poorly known, although it is generally held that organic matrix proteins play an essential role. While most crustacean cuticular organizations exhibit horizontal chitinous layering, a typical vertical organization is found towards the surface of the teeth in the mandibles of the crayfish Cherax quadricarinatus. Candidate genes encoding for mandible-forming structural proteins were mined in C. quadricarinatus molt-related transcriptomic libraries by using a binary patterning approach. A new protein family, termed the Mandible Alanine Rich Structural (MARS) protein family, with a modular sequence design predicted to form fibers, was found. Investigations of spatial and temporal expression of the different MARS genes suggested specific expression in the mandibular teeth-forming epithelium, particularly during the formation of the chitinous vertical organization. MARS loss-of-function RNAi experiments resulted in the collapse of the organization of the chitin fibers oriented vertically to the surface of the crayfish mandibular incisor tooth. A general search of transcriptomic libraries suggested conservation of MARS proteins across a wide array of crustaceans. Our results provide a first look into the molecular mechanism used to build the complex crustacean mandible and into the specialized vertical structural solution that has evolved in skeletal elements.Entities:
Keywords: Chitin fibers; Crustacean mandible; MARS proteins; Structural proteins; Tooth structure; Vertical elements
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28392452 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsb.2017.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Struct Biol ISSN: 1047-8477 Impact factor: 2.867