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Article |
Correspondence to Yoshihiko Yamada: yoshi.yamada{at}nih.gov
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Abstract |
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Introduction |
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Ameloblasts undergo several differentiation processes (Fincham et al., 1999): the presecretory, secretory, and maturation stages. All these differentiation stages can be seen simultaneously in incisors of adult rodents because they continuously grow and erupt throughout life. In the presecretory stage, the basement membrane matrix separates the dental epithelium and mesenchymal preodontoblasts (Thesleff et al., 1981; Adams and Watt, 1993). However, the basement membrane matrix disappears at the secretory stage, and enamel matrix replaces the basement membrane to support and regulate the secretory ameloblast cells (Smith, 1998). The secretory stage ameloblasts produce and secrete specific proteins in the enamel matrix that are replaced by calcium and phosphorous during the maturation stage for enamel formation.
The principal components of the enamel matrix synthesized by secretory ameloblasts can be classified into two major categories: amelogenin, which makes up 90% of the enamel matrix, and nonamelogenins including ameloblastin, enamelin, and tuftelin (Smith, 1998). Amelogenin-null mice (Gibson et al., 2001) exhibited a phenotype similar to human X-linked amelogenesis imperfecta in which ameloblast differentiation was normal but an abnormally thin enamel layer was formed. It has been suggested that amelogenins are essential for the organization of the crystal pattern and regulation of enamel thickness, and that other enamel proteins may play a role in the initial enamel formation and ameloblast differentiation (Fincham et al., 1999; Moradian-Oldak, 2001).
Ameloblastin, also known as amelin and sheathlin, is a tooth-specific glycoprotein, which represents the most abundant nonamelogenin enamel matrix protein (Cerny et al., 1996; Fong et al., 1996; Krebsbach et al., 1996). High levels of ameloblastin expression occur at the secretory stage and its expression is diminished at the maturation stage. Ameloblastin is also transiently expressed in dentin matrix and Hertwig's root sheath epithelial cells (Fong et al., 1996; Bosshardt and Nanci, 1998; Simmons et al., 1998), but its role in dentin and cementum formation has not been established. Unlike amelogenin, ameloblastin localizes near the cell surface and not in the deep enamel matrix layer (Nanci et al., 1998). Recently it was reported that transgenic mice overexpressing ameloblastin in ameloblasts resemble amelogenesis imperfecta, suggesting the importance of ameloblastin in enamel formation (Paine et al., 2003).
Here, we have generated mice with a null mutation at the ameloblastin locus to determine the role of ameloblastin in amelogenesis. The mutant mice showed several specific anomalies of tooth development including the lack of enamel formation. In ameloblastin-null mice, the dental epithelium differentiates into enamel-secreting ameloblasts, but the cells detach from the matrix surface at the secretory stage and lose cell polarity. Mutant ameloblasts resume proliferation and accumulate to form multiple cell layers, producing abnormal, unstructured, calcified matrix. Ameloblastin binds specifically to ameloblasts and inhibits cell proliferation of mutant ameloblasts. In mutant teeth, ameloblasts regain some early phenotypes of undifferentiated dental epithelial cells, and the abnormalities occur when the cells detach. Our results indicate that ameloblastin is a key adhesion molecule for enamel formation and suggest that ameloblastin plays an important role by binding to, and maintaining the differentiated phenotype of secretory ameloblasts.
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Results |
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Detachment of ameloblasts from the matrix and formation of multicell layers
In early molar development (E18), there were no differences in tooth size and shape between normal and Ambn/ mice (Fig. 3 A). In P1 molars, dentin formation had begun and dental epithelium had started to elongate with the apical nuclear localization in both control and Ambn/ mice. Thus, cellular organization of ameloblasts and odontoblasts was indistinguishable between normal and Ambn/ mice at the presecretory stage. However, at P3, ameloblasts of Ambn/ mice started to detach from the matrix layer and lose cell polarity seen as the centralized nuclear localization, whereas normal ameloblasts were polarized, elongated, and formed an enamel matrix (Fig. 3 A). At P7, Ambn/ ameloblasts completely lost their polarity (short and round shape) and accumulated to form a multilayered structure, in contrast to the single layer of Ambn+/ ameloblasts. Similar to molars, cellular organization of presecretory stage ameloblasts of Ambn/ incisors was normal (Fig. 3 B). At the early secretory stage, the mutant incisors have a zone where ameloblasts detach from the matrix and remain as a single cell layer. In the advanced stage, these cells lose polarity and form a multicell layer. In addition, connective tissues were formed underneath the detached ameloblast layer, which contained irregular calcified structures (Fig. 3 B, arrows). This calcified structure was confirmed by the presence of phosphocalcium in the energy dispersive analysis (unpublished data).
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Expression analyses of regulatory factors and tooth matrix proteins
To better characterize and gain insight into the mechanism of the abnormalities of ameloblasts in mutant mice, we examined the expression of regulatory factors and tooth marker proteins (Figs. 4 and 5). It was shown that the homeobox-containing transcription factor Msx2 was expressed in undifferentiated ameloblasts but was down-regulated in secretory stage ameloblasts (Maas and Bei, 1997). P3 Ambn+/ ameloblasts expressed the Msx2 protein but its expression was diminished in P7 ameloblasts (Fig. 4). In mutant Amb/ mice, Msx2 was expressed at P3 ameloblasts, similar to P3 Ambn+/ tooth. However, Msx2 was still expressed in a multiple cell layer of ameloblasts of P7 mutant tooth in contrast to P7 control tooth. p27, a Cdk inhibitor, was strongly expressed in P7 ameloblasts compared with P3 ameloblasts in Ambn+/ tooth (Bloch-Zupan et al., 1998), whereas its expression remained weak in P7 ameloblasts of mutant tooth. p75, a member of the TNF receptor family, was expressed in P3 Ambn+/ ameloblasts, and its expression was diminished at P7 (Mitsiadis et al., 1993). In contrast, p75 was expressed strongly in ameloblasts in P7 mutant tooth. Similar expression patterns of these proteins were observed in incisors containing all differentiation stages of the dental epithelium (unpublished data). Immunostaining of p27 was positive in immediate-early Ambn/ ameloblasts, but it was reduced in the multicell layer of early secretory ameloblasts (unpublished data). This suggested that the proliferation of ameloblasts stopped at the immediate-early secretory stage but resumed from the early secretory stage. These results suggest that in mutant tooth, Ambn/ ameloblasts regain certain early phenotypes of undifferentiated dental epithelium, when cells detach from the matrix and form a multicell layer.
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Change in ECM during ameloblast differentiation
The basement membrane provides a scaffolding for epithelium and signaling for cellular differentiation in many tissues through interactions of specific cellular receptors (Yurchenco and O'Rear, 1994; Timpl, 1996). Because secretory stage ameloblasts of Ambn/ mice showed loss of cell polarity and abnormal proliferation with detachment from the matrix, we examined the basement membrane by immunostaining normal and Ambn/ incisors (Fig. 6). In normal incisors, localization patterns of the basement membrane (stained for collagen IV and laminin ß1/1 [subunits of laminin 10/11, a major laminin in early tooth development]) and enamel matrix (stained for ameloblastin) were reciprocal (Fig. 6). The basement membrane was present at the basal lamina underneath presecretory stage ameloblasts (preameloblasts), however, at the secretory stage they disappeared and the enamel matrix emerged with some overlapping in the intermediate stage (enamel layer indicated by dotted lines). Expression patterns of integrin
6, a receptor of laminin, are similar to that of the basement membrane: it was localized at the basal layer of preameloblasts, but disappeared when preameloblasts differentiated into ameloblasts. In mutant incisors, the expression patterns of the basement membrane and integrin
6 were similar to normal incisors. It was reported that laminin 5, epithelial laminin consisting of
3ß3
2, was synthesized by secretory stage ameloblasts (Salmivirta et al., 1997; Ryan et al., 1999). Weak expression of the laminin
2 chain was observed at the early secretory stage, and its strong expression started at the late secretory stage and continued through the maturation stage, indicating that its expression is delayed compared with ameloblastin (Fig. 6). Significant staining of the laminin
2 chain was observed in the basal cytoplasm part of late secretory ameloblasts. This localization pattern is different from that of laminin ß1/
1 immunostaining where most of the staining was found in the basal lamina. In the mutant, laminin
2 was synthesized and deposited in the matrix surrounding abnormally accumulated ameloblasts. There is no difference in basement membrane formation between normal and mutant teeth at the presecretory stage. However, in a more advanced secretory stage, where ameloblastin is synthesized, abnormalities are obvious and progressive. Thus, ameloblastin is a candidate matrix protein for supporting secretory stage ameloblasts.
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We examined the binding of ameloblastin to cells. Recombinant His-tagged ameloblastin was produced in COS7 cells, purified by affinity chromatography and used for cell adhesion assays (Fig. 7). Dental epithelial cells from P3 molars adhered dishes coated with ameloblastin in a dose-dependent manner, whereas a control His-tagged protein showed no cell adhesion (Fig. 7 A). Cell binding activity of ameloblastin appears to be specific to dental epithelium because ameloblastin did not support cell adhesion to other cells including kidney epithelial cell line MDCK (Fig. 7 B). We next examined substrate-specific adhesion of ameloblasts from wild-type tooth (Table I). Because primary dental epithelial cells isolated from P7 molars contain mixed cell populations, we distinguished between preameloblast and ameloblast cell types that had adhered to substrates by immunostaining of integrin 6 and amelogenin. We found that ameloblasts (amelogenin positive and integrin
6 negative) adhered to ameloblastin, but not fibronectin and laminin 10/11. In contrast, preameloblasts (integrin
6 positive and amelogenin negative) adhered to fibronectin and laminin 10/11, but not ameloblastin. Intermediate stage cells (positive for both amelogenin and integrin
6) adhered to all three substrates. These results suggest that ameloblasts but not preameloblasts preferentially adhered to ameloblastin.
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Oral tumor formation in mutant mice
We observed that mutant mice developed soft tissue tumors in the buccal vestibule of the maxilla with age (Fig. 8 A). About 19% of the homozygous mice (6 out of 32 mice) developed lesions, with the earliest occurrence at 26 wk old (Fig. 8 B). The soft tissue tumors consisted of small epithelioid cells expressing integrin 6 and enamel matrix proteins, including amelogenin, enamelin, and tuftelin (Fig. 8, C and D). The atypical epithelium surrounded focal areas of necrotic tissue with condensed matrix staining containing calcospherites at the center. There was no ameloblastin staining in either the cells or the matrix structure. Less amelogenin staining was observed compared with other matrix proteins consistent with the expression pattern in mutant teeth. RT-PCR analysis of tumor tissue revealed expression of mRNA for enamel matrix proteins including amelogenin, enamelin, and tuftelin (Fig. 8 E). These results indicate that the tumors are derived from dental epithelium. We found that only one heterozygous mouse (1 out of 48) developed a tumor. Immunostaining (unpublished data) and RT-PCR revealed that the tumor in this heterozygous mouse did not express ameloblastin but did express other enamel matrix proteins. These cells had apparently gained the ameloblastin-null phenotype that resulted in unregulated cell proliferation.
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Discussion |
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In wild-type tooth, Msx2 and p75 are expressed in undifferentiated dental epithelium, but its expression is down-regulated in secretory stage ameloblasts. During mutant tooth development, expression of Msx2 and p75 is normal at the early stage, however, later when cells resume proliferation and form multicell layers, their expression is deregulated and increased, which are the cellular properties of undifferentiated dental epithelium. On the other hand, the multilayered cells of mutant tooth express enamel matrix proteins, amelogenin, tuftelin, and enamelin. This suggests that mutant dental epithelium can differentiate into enamel matrix-secreting ameloblasts. Although amelogenin is expressed in Ambn/ ameloblasts, its expression level is significantly reduced. Msx2 was shown to inhibit promoter activity of the ameloblastin gene in DNA transfection analysis (Zhou et al., 2000). The abnormal expression of Msx2 in Ambn/ ameloblasts is likely responsible for the down-regulation of amelogenin expression. It was also reported that Msx1 and Msx2 increase expression of cyclin D1 and inhibit cell differentiation (Hu et al., 2001). The up-regulation of Msx2 may explain the abnormal proliferation phenotype of Ambn/ ameloblasts. These results suggest that in the absence of ameloblastin, dental epithelium can differentiate into ameloblasts but regain some early phenotypes of the undifferentiated cells.
We found that recombinant ameloblastin serves as a cell adhesion molecule. This binding activity of ameloblastin is specific to dental epithelium and not to other cell types, including MDCK epithelial cells. Although the primary culture of dental epithelium contains mixed cell types, we are able to distinguish preameloblasts and ameloblasts by immunostaining marker proteins and correlating their binding activity to ameloblastin. Using these assays, we demonstrate that ameloblasts preferentially bind to ameloblastin, but not to fibronectin and laminin 10/11. In contrast, preameloblast attachment shows the opposite substrate specificity, i.e., preferential adhesion to fibronectin and laminin 10/11. We also demonstrate that ameloblastin inhibits proliferation of Ambn/ ameloblasts in culture. This inhibitory activity is not observed with nonameloblast cell types, including MDCK epithelial cells, suggesting cell-type specificity. Thus, the cell binding function of ameloblastin may explain the abnormal phenotypes of ameloblasts observed in the mutant mice.
In addition to cell adhesion, ameloblastin may have another activity during enamel formation as suggested in a transgenic mouse model (Paine et al., 2003). The abnormal matrix accumulations and discontinuous calcified tissue in the mutant enamel organ do not contain typical enamel crystal structures. Ameloblastin may provide a scaffolding to organize enamel matrix protein structures to initiate crystal formation and growth. Alternatively, enamel crystal formation may require close contact of the enamel organ with newly forming dentin. In Ambn/ mice, a thin smudgy layer coating the dentin surface is observed. This may indicate an attempt at forming enamel, yet enamel formation does not progress. Therefore, it is also conceivable that ameloblastin may play a role to sustain the progression of mineral deposition.
Deficiency of several molecules such as amelogenin, Msx2, and laminin 3 was reported to cause defects in amelogenesis. Amelogenin KO mice develop less severe enamel a defect compared with ameloblastin-KO mice (Gibson et al., 2001). In amelogenin-null tooth, ameloblasts differentiate normally and do not detach from the matrix. Amelogenin is distributed widely in the enamel matrix and is thought to play role in enamel crystallization (Fincham et al., 1999; Moradian-Oldak, 2001). Thus, ameloblastin and amelogenin appear to have a distinct function in amelogenesis (Bouwman et al., 2000; Dassule et al., 2000). In normal tooth development Msx2 is expressed in the dental epithelium and mesenchyme. Later, its expression is diminished in ameloblasts but continues in other dental epithelium such as stratum intermedium and odontoblasts (Maas and Bei, 1997). Msx2 KO tooth germs develop normally until the cap stage, however, by P1 the stratum intermedium is reduced and stratified epithelial cells accumulates in the intercuspal region and abut the ameloblast layers (Satokata et al., 2000). It seems that there is no detachment of the ameloblast layers in P9 Msx2 KO tooth. In addition, KO mice for laminin
3, a component of epithelial cell laminin 5, showed abnormal late differentiation of ameloblasts resulting in enamel hypoplasia (Ryan et al., 1999). The ameloblasts of the mutant incisors become shorter than wild-type incisors in the secretory stage, coinciding with the expression of the laminin
3 chain, and the disorganization of the reduced enamel epithelium continues throughout ameloblast differentiation. The abnormal phenotypes of ameloblastin-null mice are more severe than laminin
3-null mice.
Significant numbers of mutant mice developed tumors with age. We observed the earliest tumor formation at 26 wk old. Cells in the tumor were expressed enamel matrix proteins, suggesting that these tumors are likely derived from ameloblasts defective in ameloblastin. Consistent with this interpretation, these ameloblast-like epithelioid cells surrounded multiple focal areas consisting of enamel matrix and some calcospherites. The ameloblast-like cells likely escaped the bony crypt of the tooth before eruption and developed the tumor in the soft tissues. Human ameloblastoma is the most common odontogenic tumor (Kramer et al., 1991). It is thought to be of dental epithelial origin primarily because of histological similarity between the tumor and developing tooth (Snead et al., 1992; Abiko et al., 2001; Kumamoto et al., 2001; Yagishita et al., 2001). Toyosawa et al. (2000) reported potential mutations in the ameloblastin transcript that resulted in substitutions and a deletion of ameloblastin protein, although these mutations may not be the primary cause of ameloblastoma. More recently, the association of ameloblastin gene mutations with epithelial odontogenic tumors was reported (Perdigao et al., 2004). Although the mechanism of tumor formation in the mutant mice remains unclear, the deregulation of ameloblast differentiation due to the lack of ameloblastin is likely the primary cause of the tumor.
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Materials and methods |
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Radiographic and microtomography (micro-CT) analysis
8-wk-old mouse heads were dissected out and sliced sagittally into two symmetrical halves. Tooth mineral density was analyzed by a microradiographic technique using X-ray imaging with a standard setting of 90 s x 20 kV (model MX20; Faxitron X-ray Corporation). Hemimandibles from both heterozygote and homozygote mice, fixed for histological analysis (see below), were imaged in the wet state with a SkyScan-1072 X-ray microtomography system (SkyScan) operated at 80 kV.
Light microscopy of plastic-embedded teeth and SEM analyses
Some incisors fixed as below were decalcified in 4.13% EDTA, dehydrated in graded ethanol, and processed for embedding in LR white resin as described previously (Nanci et al., 1998). 1-µm-thick sections were cut with glass knives, stained with toluidine blue and examined with an Axiophot light microscope (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.). Other calcified incisors were fractured at several sites along their length, dehydrated in ethanol, critical point dried with CO2, and examined in a variable pressure scanning electron microscope (model JSM 5910 LV; JEOL).
Preparation of tissue sections and immunohistochemistry
E18, P1, P3, P7, and 6-wk-old mouse heads were dissected out and fixed with 4% PFA in PBS overnight at 4°C. Tissues were decalcified with 250 mM EDTA/PBS for 3 d and embedded into OCT compound (Sakura Finetechnical Co.) for frozen sectioning. Sections were cut at 8 µm on a cryostat (2800 FRIGOCUT; Leica). For 6-wk-old mouse head preparation, mice were anesthetized and fixed by perfusion with 4% PFA/PBS. The maxilla were dissected out, fixed after overnight at 4°C in 4% PFA/PBS, decalcified with 250 mM EDTA/PBS for 1 wk, and dehydrated into xylene through a graded ethanol series and embedded in Paraplast paraffin (Oxford Laboratories). Sections were cut at 10 µm on a microtome (RM2155; Leica). For the detailed morphological analysis of molars and incisors, sections were stained with Harris hematoxylin (Sigma-Aldrich) and Eosine Y (Sigma-Aldrich). For staining of cultured cells, cells were fixed with 4% PFA/0.5% Triton X-100/PBS for 5 min and 4% PFA/PBS for 10 min.
Immunohistochemistry was performed on sections, which were incubated in 1% BSA/PBS for 1 h before incubation with primary antibody. We used antibodies directed against ameloblastin (Krebsbach et al., 1996), amelogenin (a gift from J. Simmer, University of Michigan, and M. Zeichner-David, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA), enamelin (a gift from J. Simmer), dentin sialoprotein (a gift from J. Simmer), tuftelin (a gift from M. Zeichner-David), PCNA (MAB424; CHEMICON International, Inc.), collagen IV (AB756; CHEMICON International, Inc.), laminin (AB2034; CHEMICON, International, Inc.), integrin 6 (GoH3; BD Biosciences), laminin
2 (Sugiyama et al., 1995), Msx2 (sc-15396; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), p27 (sc-528; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), and p75 (PRB-602C; Covance). Primary antibodies were detected by Cy-3 or FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories). Nuclear staining was performed with Hoechst dye (Sigma-Aldrich) or DAPI (Vector Laboratories). A fluorescent microscope (Axiovert 200; Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.) was used for immunofluorescent image analysis. Images were prepared using AxioVision and Photoshop (Adobe Systems, Inc.).
RNA isolation and RT-PCR
Developing molars were dissected from P3 mice. RNA was isolated using the TRIzol reagent exactly as described previously (Life Technologies). First strand cDNA was synthesized at 42°C for 90 min using Oligo(dT)14 primer. PCR amplification was performed using primers listed in Table S1 available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200409077/DC1. PCR was performed with 30 cycles, 90°C for 15 min, 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min.
Silver staining and Western blotting
Developing molars were dissected from P3 mice. The samples were suspended in 50 µl of lysis buffer (1% Triton X-100, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2). The protein samples were fractionated by SDS-PAGE and transferred into a nylon membrane. For silver staining, gel was stained with Silver Quest (Invitrogen). The blots were incubated with antibodies, and the signals were detected with an ECL kit (Amersham Biosciences). The anti-amelogenin antibodies were raised from recombinant ameloblastin (Nanci et al., 1998). Anti-amelogenin was a gift from J. Simmer.
Expression and purification of recombinant ameloblastin
The expression vector pEF6/V5-His-Topo (Invitrogen) was used to express His-tagged ameloblastin protein (mRNA residues 11266). The expression plasmid was transfected into COS7 cells using Lipofectamine 2000 reagent (Invitrogen). After 2 d, transfected cells were lysed by lysis buffer (1% Triton X-100, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2), and His-tagged recombinant protein was purified by TARON purification system (CLONTECH Laboratories, Inc.) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Purified recombinant protein was separated by SDS-PAGE and confirmed by staining with Coomassie blue and immunoblotting with anti-ameloblastin antibody.
Cell cultures and cell adhesion assay
For dental epithelial cell cultures, molars from P7 mice were dissected. Molars were treated with 0.1% collagenase/0.05% trypsin/0.5 mM EDTA for 10 min, and dental epithelium was separated from dental mesenchyme. Separated dental epithelium was treated with 0.1% collagenase/0.05% trypsin/0.5 mM EDTA for 15 min and pipetted up and down well. The dental epithelium was isolated from these molars and cultured in keratinocyte-SFM medium (GIBCO BRL) supplemented with EGF and bovine pituitary extract for 7 d to remove contaminated mesenchymal cells. Cells were then detached with 0.05% EDTA, washed with DME containing 0.1% BSA, and resuspended to a concentration of 1.0 x 105/ml and used for cell adhesion assays. Rat chondrosarcoma cells were from J.H. Kimura (Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI). Mouse fibroblasts (NIH3T3), human cervix adenocarcinoma (HeLa), MDCK cells, and monkey kidney cells (COS7) were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection. Human kidney epithelium (293EBNA) was obtained from Invitrogen. These cells were cultured in DME containing 10% fetal bovine serum.
Cell adhesion assays were performed in 96-well round-bottom microtiter plates (Immulon-2HB; Dynex Technologies, Inc.). Wells were coated overnight at 4°C with 10 µg/ml recombinant ameloblastin or human fibronectin (GIBCO BRL) or human laminin 10/11 (GIBCO BRL) that were diluted with PBS and blocked with 3% BSA for 1 h at 37°C. After wash, 104 cells were added and incubated for 60 min at 37°C. The plates were washed with PBS three times to remove unattached cells, and attached cells were treated with 0.05% trypsin/0.5 mM EDTA and counted under a microscope. To identify the expression of integrin 6 and amelogenin in attached cells, cells were replated on cover strips. At 3 h after plating, cells were fixed with 4% PFA/PBS and followed by immunohistochemistry.
Cell proliferation assays
Dental epithelial cells were obtained from P3 and P7 molars of both heterozygous and mutant mice. 10 µg/ml recombinant ameloblastin proteins were coated on 12-well culture dishes overnight at 4°C and washed with keratinocyte-SFM medium three times. 3.0 x 104 dental epithelial cells were cultured on the dish coated with or without recombinant ameloblastin for 5 d. At 1, 3, and 5 d after plating, cells were treated with 0.05% trypsin/0.5 mM EDTA, and the cell number was counted under a microscope.
Online supplemental material
Table S1 lists primer sets used for the RT-PCR analysis in Fig. 5. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200409077/DC1.
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Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported in part by grants-in-aid for Research Fellows of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan, nos. 15689025 (to S. Fukumoto).
Submitted: 13 September 2004
Accepted: 26 October 2004
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