IADR Abstract Archives

Study for the Apical bud Differentiation Model Using Green Mice

Objectives: Rodent mandibular incisors have a unique anatomical structure that allows teeth to grow throughout the lifetime of the rodent. This report presents a novel transplantation technique for studying the apical bud differentiation of rodent mandibular incisors.
Methods: Incisal apical end tissue with green fluorescent protein from transgenic mouse was transplanted to wild type mice, and the development of the transplanted cells were immunohistologically observed for 12 weeks after the transplantation.
Results: The green fluorescent apical end tissue replaced the original tissue, and cells from the apical bud differentiated and extended toward the incisal edge direction. The immunostaining with podoplanin also showed that the characeristics of the green fluorescent tissue was identical to that of the original. The green fluorescent cells were only found in the labial side of the incisor up to 4 weeks. After 12 weeks, however, they were also found in the lingual side. Here the green fluorescent cementocyte-like cells were only present in the cementum close to the dentin surface.
Conclusions: This study suggests that some of the cells that form the cellular cementum come from the apical tissue including the apical bud in rodent incisors.
Division: IADR/APR General Session
Meeting: 2016 IADR/APR General Session (Seoul, Korea)
Location: Seoul, Korea
Year: 2016
Final Presentation ID: 0775
Abstract Category|Abstract Category(s): Periodontal Research-Diagnosis/Epidemiology
Authors
  • Maruo, Naoki  ( fukuoka dental college , Fukuoka , Japan )
  • Sakagami, Ryuji  ( Fukuoka Dental College , Fukuoka , Japan )
  • Yoshinaga, Yasunori  ( Fukuoka Dental College , Fukuoka , Japan )
  • Sawa, Yoshihiko  ( Fukuoka Dental College , Fukuoka , Japan )
  • Financial Interest Disclosure: None
    SESSION INFORMATION
    Poster Session
    Periodontal Research, Epidemiology, Miscellaneous
    Thursday, 06/23/2016 , 03:30PM - 04:45PM