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Original Article

Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor(FGF-2) in Mouse Tooth Morphogenesis

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Pages 125-133 | Received 19 Nov 1996, Accepted 10 Jun 1997, Published online: 11 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

This study describes the spatio-temporal expression of basic Fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2) during odontogenesis of mouse as revealed by immunohistology. Parasagittal sections of mouse embryo head (13–18 day of gestation) containing various stages of developing tooth were incubated with a polyclonal anti-FGF-2 antibody and positive binding was evidentiated by using Streptavidin-Biotin complex-HRP system and AEC staining. We observed no FGF-2 staining at the dental lamina stage. At the bud stage slight staining is seen, limited to some epithelial cells. The intensity of the staining increases at the cap stage. In the bell stage, the stellate reticulum cells stain intensely. Later, odontoblasts and the dentin matrix stain deeply; but the epithelial cells stain faint. The extra cellular matrix of the dentin and dental papilla stain very intense but the enamel matrix is found negative. These results indicate the participation of FGF-2 in differentiation rather than in proliferation of tooth-forming cells. In particular, it appears that FGF-2 participates in odontoblast differentiation and in dentin matrix deposition. The spatio-temporally specific distribution pattern of FGF-2 in developing mouse tooth reported here emphasizes the importance of FGF-2 in mammalian odontogenesis.

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