Jaskoll Tina, Abichaker George, Jangaard Nolan, Bringas Pablo, Melnick Michael
Laboratory for Developmental Genetics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0641, USA.
Arch Oral Biol. 2008 May;53(5):405-15. doi: 10.1016/j.archoralbio.2007.11.014. Epub 2008 Jan 16.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is one of the most common causes of major birth defects in humans. Of the approximately 8400 children born each year in the U.S. with CMV-induced birth defects, more than 1/3 of these children exhibit hypoplasia and hypocalcification of tooth enamel. Our objective was to initiate the investigation of the pathogenesis of CMV-induced tooth defects.
Mouse Cap stage mandibular first molars were infected with mouse CMV (mCMV) in vitro in a chemically-defined organ culture system and analysed utilising histological and immunolocalisation methodologies. The antiviral, acyclovir, was used to inhibit mCMV replication and comparisons made between mCMV-infected and acyclovir-treated, mCMV-infected teeth.
Active infection of Cap stage molars for up to 15 days in vitro results in smaller, developmentally-delayed and dysmorphic molars characterised by shallow, broad and misshapen cusps, infected and affected dental papilla mesenchyme, poorly differentiated odontoblasts and ameloblasts, and no dentin matrix. Initial protein localisation studies suggest that the pathogenesis is mediated through NF-kappaB signaling and that there appears to be an unusual interaction between abnormal mesenchymal cells and surrounding matrix. Rescue with acyclovir indicates that mCMV replication is necessary to initiate and sustain progressive tooth dysmorphogenesis.
Our results indicate that mCMV-induced changes in signaling pathways severely delays, but does not completely interrupt, tooth morphogenesis. Importantly, our results demonstrate that this well-defined embryonic mouse organ culture system can be utilised to delineate the molecular mechanism underlying the CMV-induced tooth defects that characterise the amelogenesis imperfecta phenocopy seen in many CMV-infected children.
巨细胞病毒(CMV)是人类主要出生缺陷的最常见原因之一。在美国,每年约有8400名儿童因CMV导致出生缺陷,其中超过三分之一的儿童表现出牙釉质发育不全和钙化不足。我们的目的是启动对CMV诱导牙齿缺陷发病机制的研究。
在化学定义的器官培养系统中,将小鼠帽状期下颌第一磨牙在体外感染小鼠巨细胞病毒(mCMV),并利用组织学和免疫定位方法进行分析。使用抗病毒药物阿昔洛韦抑制mCMV复制,并对mCMV感染的牙齿和阿昔洛韦治疗的mCMV感染牙齿进行比较。
帽状期磨牙在体外进行长达15天的主动感染会导致磨牙变小、发育延迟和形态异常,其特征为牙尖浅、宽且畸形,牙乳头间充质受感染和影响,成牙本质细胞和成釉细胞分化不良,且无牙本质基质。初步的蛋白质定位研究表明,发病机制是通过核因子κB信号传导介导的,并且异常间充质细胞与周围基质之间似乎存在异常相互作用。阿昔洛韦的挽救作用表明,mCMV复制对于启动和维持进行性牙齿形态异常是必要的。
我们的结果表明,mCMV诱导的信号通路变化严重延迟但并未完全中断牙齿形态发生。重要的是,我们的结果表明,这种明确的胚胎小鼠器官培养系统可用于阐明CMV诱导牙齿缺陷的分子机制,这些缺陷是许多CMV感染儿童中所见的牙釉质发育不全表型的特征。