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Laminin α5 Is Required for Dental Epithelium Growth and Polarity and the Development of Tooth Bud and Shape

In tooth development, the oral ectoderm and mesenchyme coordinately and reciprocally interact through the basement membrane for their growth and differentiation to form the proper shape and size of the tooth. Laminin α5 subunit-containing laminin-10/11 (LM-511/521) is the major laminin in the tooth...

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Published in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2006-02, Vol.281 (8), p.5008
Main Authors: Satoshi Fukumoto, Jeffrey H. Miner, Hiroko Ida, Emiko Fukumoto, Kenji Yuasa, Hiroshi Miyazaki, Matthew P. Hoffman, Yoshihiko Yamada
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container_issue 8
container_start_page 5008
container_title The Journal of biological chemistry
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creator Satoshi Fukumoto
Jeffrey H. Miner
Hiroko Ida
Emiko Fukumoto
Kenji Yuasa
Hiroshi Miyazaki
Matthew P. Hoffman
Yoshihiko Yamada
description In tooth development, the oral ectoderm and mesenchyme coordinately and reciprocally interact through the basement membrane for their growth and differentiation to form the proper shape and size of the tooth. Laminin α5 subunit-containing laminin-10/11 (LM-511/521) is the major laminin in the tooth germ basement membrane. Here, we have examined the role of laminin α5 (Lama5) in tooth development using laminin α5-null mouse primary dental epithelium and tooth germ organ cultures. Lama5 -null mice develop a small tooth germ with defective cusp formation and have reduced proliferation of dental epithelium. Also, cell polarity and formation of the monolayer of the inner dental epithelium are disturbed. The enamel knot, a signaling center for tooth germ development, is defective, and there is a significant reduction of Shh and Fgf4 expression in the dental epithelium. In the absence of laminin α5, the basement membrane in the inner dental epithelium becomes discontinuous. In normal mice, integrin α6β4, a receptor for laminin α5, is strongly localized at the basal layer of the epithelium, whereas in mutant mice, integrin α6β4 is expressed around the cell surface. In primary dental epithelium culture, laminin-10/11 promotes cell growth, spreading, and filopodia-like microspike formation. This promotion is inhibited by anti-integrin α6 and β4 antibodies and by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitors and dominant negative Rho-GTPase family proteins Cdc42 and Rac. In organ culture, anti-integrin α6 antibody and wortmannin reduce tooth germ size and shape. Our studies demonstrate that laminin α5 is required for the proliferation and polarity of basal epithelial cells and suggest that the interaction between laminin-10/11-integrin α6β4 and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Cdc42/Rac pathways play an important role in determining the size and shape of tooth germ.
doi_str_mv 10.1074/jbc.M509295200
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title Laminin α5 Is Required for Dental Epithelium Growth and Polarity and the Development of Tooth Bud and Shape
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