Journal article
Identification of novel candidate genes involved in mineralization of dental enamel by genome-wide transcript profiling
RS Lacruz, CE Smith, P Bringas, YB Chen, SM Smith, ML Snead, I Kurtz, JG Hacia, MJ Hubbard, ML Paine
Journal of Cellular Physiology | Published : 2012
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.22965
Abstract
The gene repertoire regulating vertebrate biomineralization is poorly understood. Dental enamel, the most highly mineralized tissue in mammals, differs from other calcifying systems in that the formative cells (ameloblasts) lack remodeling activity and largely degrade and resorb the initial extracellular matrix. Enamel mineralization requires that ameloblasts undergo a profound functional switch from matrix-secreting to maturational (calcium transport, protein resorption) roles as mineralization progresses. During the maturation stage, extracellular pH decreases markedly, placing high demands on ameloblasts to regulate acidic environments present around the growing hydroxyapatite crystals. T..
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Awarded by National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Funding Acknowledgements
[ "Contract grant sponsor: National Institutes of Health;", "Contract grant numbers: DE013404, DE019629, DE013045, DE006988, DK058563, DK077162, GM072447.", "Contract grant sponsor: Melbourne Research Unit for Facial Disorders." ]