학술논문

Exon4 Amelogenin Transcripts in Enamel Biomineralization
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Dental Research. 94(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Dentistry
Bioengineering
Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Alternative Splicing
Ameloblasts
Amelogenesis
Amelogenin
Animals
Calcium
Cell Differentiation
Dental Enamel Proteins
Durapatite
Exons
Female
Mass Spectrometry
Mice
Phosphates
Protein Binding
Rats
Rats
Wistar
Recombinant Proteins
Time Factors
Tooth Calcification
Up-Regulation
mineralized tissue
protein expression
tooth development
matrix biology
craniofacial biology
cell-matrix interactions
Language
Abstract
Amelogenins are proteins formed by alternative splicing of the amelogenin gene, and are essential for tooth enamel formation. However, the unique functions of various alternatively spliced amelogenins in enamel formation are not well understood. In this study, we determined the spatiotemporal location of amelogenins derived from transcripts containing exon4 (AMG+4) in the enamel matrix, and the relative binding of recombinant AMG+4 to hydroxyapatite (HAP). Immunohistochemistry and mass spectrometry analyses showed that AMG+4 proteins were secreted into the enamel matrix at the early maturation stage. A stage-specific increase in the synthesis of AMG+4 was further supported by our observation that in mice overexpressing leucine-rich amelogenin peptide (TgLRAP), in which ameloblasts differentiate earlier, AMG+4 transcripts were also upregulated earlier. In vitro binding studies, supported by in silico modeling of protein binding to calcium and phosphate, showed that more recombinant AMG+4 bound to hydroxyapatite (HAP) as compared with recombinant AMG-4. The temporal and spatial localization of amelogenins containing exon4 peptide, and their functional differences in HAP binding, suggests that the unique properties of amelogenins containing exon4 cause a specific enhancement of biomineralization related to stabilization of early-formed HAP at the maturation stage.