نتایج جستجو برای: human dental enamel

تعداد نتایج: 1787662  

2015
Maria Jussila Anne J. Aalto Maria Sanz Navarro Vera Shirokova Anamaria Balic Aki Kallonen Takahiro Ohyama Andrew K. Groves Marja L. Mikkola Irma Thesleff

Epithelial morphogenesis generates the shape of the tooth crown. This is driven by patterned differentiation of cells into enamel knots, root-forming cervical loops and enamel-forming ameloblasts. Enamel knots are signaling centers that define the positions of cusp tips in a tooth by instructing the adjacent epithelium to fold and proliferate. Here, we show that the forkhead-box transcription f...

2014

The incidence of caries has declined; however, other dental lesions such as tooth wear are becoming increasingly important. Dental wear is a multifactorial process that may encompass erosion, abrasion, and combinations thereof. Therefore, various methodologies have been applied to evaluate the loss of dental hard tissue and the surface-softened zone in enamel induced by abrasive and erosive cha...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2015
Jing Xia Jing Zheng Diaodiao Huang Z Ryan Tian Lei Chen Zhongrong Zhou Peter S Ungar Linmao Qian

Paleoanthropologists and vertebrate paleontologists have for decades debated the etiology of tooth wear and its implications for understanding the diets of human ancestors and other extinct mammals. The debate has recently taken a twist, calling into question the efficacy of dental microwear to reveal diet. Some argue that endogenous abrasives in plants (opal phytoliths) are too soft to abrade ...

2003
Y. Yamakoshi

Dental enamel forms as a progressively thickening extracellular layer by the action of proteins secreted by ameloblasts. The most abundant enamel protein is amelogenin, which is expressed primarily from a gene on the X-chromosome (AMELX). The two most abundant non-amelogenin enamel proteins are ameloblastin and enamelin, which are expressed from the AMBN and ENAM genes, respectively. The human ...

Journal: :Cells, tissues, organs 2013
Liwei Zheng Rungnapa Warotayanont Jonathan Stahl Ryo Kunimatsu Ophir Klein Pamela K DenBesten Yan Zhang

The development of cell-based therapeutic strategies to bioengineer tooth tissue is a promising approach for the treatment of lost or damaged tooth tissue. The lack of a readily available cell source for human dental epithelial cells (ECs) severely constrains the progress of tooth bioengineering. Previous studies in model organisms have demonstrated that developing dental mesenchyme can instruc...

2010
John D. Bartlett Justine M. Dobeck Coralee E. Tye Mirna Perez-Moreno Nicole Stokes Albert B. Reynolds Elaine Fuchs Ziedonis Skobe

Dental enamel development occurs in stages. The ameloblast cell layer is adjacent to, and is responsible for, enamel formation. When rodent pre-ameloblasts become tall columnar secretory-stage ameloblasts, they secrete enamel matrix proteins, and the ameloblasts start moving in rows that slide by one another. This movement is necessary to form the characteristic decussating enamel prism pattern...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2004
Satoshi Fukumoto Takayoshi Kiba Bradford Hall Noriyuki Iehara Takashi Nakamura Glenn Longenecker Paul H. Krebsbach Antonio Nanci Ashok B. Kulkarni Yoshihiko Yamada

Tooth morphogenesis results from reciprocal interactions between oral epithelium and ectomesenchyme culminating in the formation of mineralized tissues, enamel, and dentin. During this process, epithelial cells differentiate into enamel-secreting ameloblasts. Ameloblastin, an enamel matrix protein, is expressed by differentiating ameloblasts. Here, we report the creation of ameloblastin-null mi...

2005
J-W Kim J P Simmer T C Hart P S Hart M D Ramaswami J D Bartlett J C-C Hu

D uring mammalian tooth formation, two proteinases are secreted by ameloblasts: enamelysin (MMP-20) and kallikrein-4 (KLK4). Enamelysin is the early protease. It is expressed by ameloblasts throughout the secretory stage and part of the maturation stage. KLK4 is the late protease; its expression by ameloblasts begins in the transition stage and continues throughout enamel maturation. 5 Expressi...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 2005
J-W Kim J P Simmer T C Hart P S Hart M D Ramaswami J D Bartlett J C-C Hu

D uring mammalian tooth formation, two proteinases are secreted by ameloblasts: enamelysin (MMP-20) and kallikrein-4 (KLK4). Enamelysin is the early protease. It is expressed by ameloblasts throughout the secretory stage and part of the maturation stage. KLK4 is the late protease; its expression by ameloblasts begins in the transition stage and continues throughout enamel maturation. 5 Expressi...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2001
P C Donoghue

Recognition that conodonts were the earliest vertebrate group to experiment with skeletal biomineralization provides a window in which to study the origin and early evolution of this developmental system. It has been contended that the conodont skeleton comprised a classic suite of vertebrate hard tissues, while others suggest that conodont hard tissues represent divergent specializations withi...

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