Sawada Takashi
Department of Ultrastructural Science, Tokyo Dental College, Mihama-ku, Chiba City 261-8502, Japan.
Med Electron Microsc. 2003 Dec;36(4):204-12. doi: 10.1007/s00795-003-0222-3.
The basement membrane, which separates the inner enamel epithelium from the dental papilla in the early stages of tooth development, is known to play a significant role in odontogenesis. In this review article, this basement membrane was described in detail based on our recent findings with the use of high-resolution electron microscopy. Tooth germs of a monkey (Macaca fuscata) and a shark (Cephaloscyllium umbratile) were processed for thin-section observations. During the early stage of development, the basement membrane of the inner enamel (dental) epithelium was composed of a lamina lucida, lamina densa, and much wider lamina fibroreticularis. At higher magnification, the lamina densa in both species was made up of a fine network of cords, which are generally the main constituents of the basement membranes. In the monkey tooth, the lamina fibroreticularis was rich in fibrils, which were now characterized as basotubules, 10-nm-wide microfibril-like structures. The space between the basotubules was filled with a cord network that extended from the lamina densa. Dental papilla cell processes were inserted into the lamina fibroreticularis, and their surface was closely associated with numerous parallel basotubules via 1.5- to 3-nm-wide filaments. In the shark tooth during its early stage of development, the basotubules were absent in the lamina fibroreticularis and only narrow extensions, 60-90 nm wide and 1-2 microm long, of the cord network of the lamina densa were present. The dental papilla cells were immobilized by means of the binding of their processes to the extensions. These results indicate that basement membranes in both monkey and shark teeth at early stage of development are specialized for functions as anchoring and firm binding, which are essential for the successful differentiation of the odontoblasts.
在牙齿发育早期,将内釉上皮与牙乳头分隔开的基底膜,已知在牙发生过程中发挥重要作用。在这篇综述文章中,基于我们最近使用高分辨率电子显微镜的研究结果,对这种基底膜进行了详细描述。对一只猕猴(食蟹猴)和一条鲨鱼(阴影绒毛鲨)的牙胚进行了薄切片观察。在发育早期,内釉(牙)上皮的基底膜由透明板、致密板和宽得多的纤维网状板组成。在更高放大倍数下,两个物种的致密板均由精细的索状网络构成,这些索状结构通常是基底膜的主要成分。在猕猴牙齿中,纤维网状板富含纤维,现在这些纤维被鉴定为基底小管,即10纳米宽的微纤维样结构。基底小管之间的空间充满了从致密板延伸而来的索状网络。牙乳头细胞突起插入纤维网状板,其表面通过1.5至3纳米宽的细丝与众多平行的基底小管紧密相连。在鲨鱼牙齿发育早期,纤维网状板中不存在基底小管,仅存在致密板索状网络的狭窄延伸部分,宽60 - 90纳米,长1 - 2微米。牙乳头细胞通过其突起与这些延伸部分的结合而固定。这些结果表明,猕猴和鲨鱼牙齿发育早期的基底膜专门用于锚定和牢固结合功能,这对于成牙本质细胞的成功分化至关重要。