PUBLICATION

N-cadherin is Required for Cytodifferentiation during Zebrafish Odontogenesis

Authors
Verstraeten, B., van Hengel, J., Sanders, E., Van Roy, F., and Huysseune, A.
ID
ZDB-PUB-130222-15
Date
2013
Source
Journal of dental research   92(4): 365-370 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Huysseune, Ann
Keywords
tooth development, tooth replacement, adherens junction, cdh2, Danio rerio, parachute mutant
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Cadherins/genetics
  • Cadherins/metabolism*
  • Cell Differentiation/genetics
  • Cell Differentiation/physiology*
  • Odontoblasts/metabolism
  • Odontogenesis/genetics
  • Odontogenesis/physiology*
  • Tissue Distribution
  • Tooth Germ/growth & development
  • Tooth Germ/metabolism*
  • Zebrafish
  • Zebrafish Proteins/genetics
  • Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism*
PubMed
23396519 Full text @ J. Dent. Res.
Abstract

N-cadherin is a well-studied classic cadherin involved in multiple developmental processes and is also known to have a signaling function. Using the zebrafish (Danio rerio) as a model, we tested the hypothesis that tooth morphogenesis is accompanied by dynamic changes in N-cadherin distribution and that absence of N-cadherin disturbs tooth development. N-cadherin, encoded by the gene cdh2, is absent during the initiation and morphogenesis stages of both primary (first-generation) and replacement teeth, as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. However, N-cadherin is up-regulated at the onset of differentiation of cells of the inner dental epithelium and the dental papilla, i.e., the ameloblasts and odontoblasts, respectively. In the inner dental epithelium, N-cadherin is co-expressed with E-cadherin, excluding the occurrence of cadherin switching such as observed during human tooth development. While early lethality of N-cadherin knockout mice prevents any functional study of N-cadherin in mouse odontogenesis, zebrafish parachute (pac) mutants, deficient for N-cadherin, survive beyond the age when primary teeth normally start to form. In these mutants, the first tooth forms, but its development stops at the early cytodifferentiation stage. N-cadherin deficiency also completely inhibits the development of the other first-generation teeth, possibly due to the absence of N-cadherin signaling once the first tooth has differentiated.

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