نتایج جستجو برای: enamel matrix protein

تعداد نتایج: 1550209  

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2011
Charles E Smith Amelia S Richardson Yuanyuan Hu John D Bartlett Jan C-C Hu James P Simmer

Enamel formation depends on a triad of tissue-specific matrix proteins (amelogenin, ameloblastin, and enamelin) to help initiate and stabilize progressively elongating, thin mineral ribbons of hydroxyapatite formed during an appositional growth phase. Subsequently, these proteins are eradicated to facilitate lateral expansion of the hydroxyapatite crystallites. The purpose of this study was to ...

Journal: :International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2020

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2013
Leila Mohazab Leeni Koivisto Guoqiao Jiang Leena Kytömäki Markus Haapasalo Gethin R Owen Colin Wiebe Yanshuang Xie Kristiina Heikinheimo Toshiyuki Yoshida Charles E Smith Jyrki Heino Lari Häkkinen Marc D McKee Hannu Larjava

Tooth enamel has the highest degree of biomineralization of all vertebrate hard tissues. During the secretory stage of enamel formation, ameloblasts deposit an extracellular matrix that is in direct contact with the ameloblast plasma membrane. Although it is known that integrins mediate cell-matrix adhesion and regulate cell signaling in most cell types, the receptors that regulate ameloblast a...

2016
Karina M. M. Carneiro Halei Zhai Li Zhu Jeremy A. Horst Melody Sitlin Mychi Nguyen Martin Wagner Cheryl Simpliciano Melissa Milder Chun-Long Chen Paul Ashby Johan Bonde Wu Li Stefan Habelitz

Enamel, the outermost layer of teeth, is an acellular mineralized tissue that cannot regenerate; the mature tissue is composed of high aspect ratio apatite nanocrystals organized into rods and inter-rod regions. Amelogenin constitutes 90% of the protein matrix in developing enamel and plays a central role in guiding the hierarchical organization of apatite crystals observed in mature enamel. To...

Journal: :Cells, tissues, organs 2009
Coralee E Tye Rachel L Lorenz John D Bartlett

The enamel matrix proteins (amelogenin, enamelin and ameloblastin) are degraded by matrix metalloproteinase-20 and kallikrein-4 during enamel development and mature enamel is virtually protein free. The precise mechanism of removal and degradation of the enamel protein cleavage products from the matrix, however, remains poorly understood. It has been proposed that receptor-mediated endocytosis ...

2017
Mirali Pandya Lauren Rosene Colin Farquharson José L. Millán Thomas G. H. Diekwisch

The transport of mineral ions from the enamel organ-associated blood vessels to the developing enamel crystals involves complex cargo packaging and carriage mechanisms across several cell layers, including the ameloblast layer and the stratum intermedium. Previous studies have established PHOSPHO1 as a matrix vesicle membrane-associated phosphatase that interacts with matrix vesicles molecules ...

2017
Mirali Pandya Hui Liu Smit J. Dangaria Weiying Zhu Leo L. Li Shuang Pan Moufida Abufarwa Roderick G. Davis Stephen Guggenheim Timothy Keiderling Xianghong Luan Thomas G. H. Diekwisch

Tooth amelogenesis is a complex process beginning with enamel organ cell differentiation and enamel matrix secretion, transitioning through changes in ameloblast polarity, cytoskeletal, and matrix organization, that affects crucial biomineralization events such as mineral nucleation, enamel crystal growth, and enamel prism organization. Here we have harvested the enamel organ including the plia...

2017
Cong-Dat Pham Charles E. Smith Yuanyuan Hu Jan C-C. Hu James P. Simmer Yong-Hee P. Chun

Enamel formation requires consecutive stages of development to achieve its characteristic extreme mineral hardness. Mineralization depends on the initial presence then removal of degraded enamel proteins from the matrix via endocytosis. The ameloblast membrane resides at the interface between matrix and cell. Enamel formation is controlled by ameloblasts that produce enamel in stages to build t...

2009
Walid El-Sayed David A. Parry Roger C. Shore Mushtaq Ahmed Hussain Jafri Yasmin Rashid Suhaila Al-Bahlani Sharifa Al Harasi Jennifer Kirkham Chris F. Inglehearn Alan J. Mighell

Healthy dental enamel is the hardest and most highly mineralized human tissue. Though acellular, nonvital, and without capacity for turnover or repair, it can nevertheless last a lifetime. Amelogenesis imperfecta (AI) is a collective term for failure of normal enamel development, covering diverse clinical phenotypes that typically show Mendelian inheritance patterns. One subset, known as hypoma...

Journal: :Journal of biomimetics, biomaterials, and tissue engineering 2010
Vuk Uskoković

This review presents a discourse on challenges in understanding and imitating the process of amelogenesis in vitro on the molecular scale. In light of the analysis of imitation of the growth of dental enamel, it also impends on the prospects and potential drawbacks of the biomimetic approach in general. As the formation of enamel proceeds with the protein matrix guiding the crystal growth, whil...

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