Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, PA, USA.
Cells Tissues Organs. 2011;194(2-4):108-12. doi: 10.1159/000324225. Epub 2011 May 13.
Diverse hard tissues constituted a tooth-like skeletal element in extinct jawless vertebrates. Today, similar tissues are found in our teeth. These tissues mineralize in the extracellular matrix and involve various macromolecules. Among these molecules are secretory calcium-binding phosphoproteins (SCPPs) coded by genes that arose by duplication. Although the repertoire of SCPPs may vary in different lineages, some SCPPs are unusually acidic and are thought to participate in the mineralization of a collagenous matrix, principally either bone or dentin. Other SCPPs are rich in Pro and Gln (P/Q) and are employed to form the tooth surface. In tetrapods, the tooth surface is usually covered with enamel which develops in a matrix comprised of P/Q-rich SCPPs. By contrast, the tooth surface tissue in teleosts is called enameloid and it forms in a dentin-like collagenous matrix. Despite the difference in their matrix, both enamel and enameloid mature into hypermineralized inorganic tissues. Notably, some P/Q-rich SCPP genes are primarily expressed at this stage and their proteins localize between the tooth surface and overlying dental epithelium. Moreover, an orthologous gene is used for maturation of these 2 different tissues. These findings suggest distinct roles of acidic and P/Q-rich SCPPs during the evolution of hard tissues. Acidic SCPPs initially regulated the mineralization of bone, dentin, or a similar ancient collagenous tissue through interaction with calcium ions. P/Q-rich SCPPs arose next and originally assembled a structure or a space that facilitated the hypermineralization of dentin or a dentin-like tissue. Subsequently, some P/Q-rich SCPPs were coopted for the mineralizing enamel matrix. More recently, however, many SCPP genes were lost in toothless birds and mammals. Thus, it appears that, in vertebrates, the phenotypic complexity of hard tissues correlates with gain and loss of SCPP genes.
不同的硬组织构成了已灭绝无颌脊椎动物的牙齿状骨骼元素。如今,类似的组织存在于我们的牙齿中。这些组织在细胞外基质中矿化,涉及各种大分子。这些分子中包括由基因复制产生的分泌钙结合磷蛋白 (SCPP)。尽管不同谱系中的 SCPP 谱可能不同,但一些 SCPP 非常酸性,被认为参与胶原基质的矿化,主要是骨或牙本质。其他 SCPP 富含 Pro 和 Gln (P/Q),用于形成牙面。在四足动物中,牙面通常覆盖着釉质,釉质在由富含 P/Q 的 SCPP 组成的基质中发育。相比之下,硬骨鱼的牙面组织称为釉质,它在类似于牙本质的胶原基质中形成。尽管它们的基质不同,但釉质和釉质都成熟为超矿化的无机组织。值得注意的是,一些富含 P/Q 的 SCPP 基因主要在这个阶段表达,它们的蛋白质定位于牙面和覆盖的牙上皮之间。此外,同源基因用于这两种不同组织的成熟。这些发现表明酸性和富含 P/Q 的 SCPP 在硬组织进化过程中具有不同的作用。酸性 SCPP 最初通过与钙离子相互作用来调节骨、牙本质或类似的古老胶原组织的矿化。接下来出现了富含 P/Q 的 SCPP,最初组装了一个结构或空间,促进了牙本质或类似牙本质组织的超矿化。随后,一些富含 P/Q 的 SCPP 被用于矿化釉质基质。然而,最近,许多 SCPP 基因在无齿鸟类和哺乳动物中丢失。因此,似乎在脊椎动物中,硬组织的表型复杂性与 SCPP 基因的获得和丢失相关。