Abstract

Apoptosis in the periodontal connective tissues was studied using the TUNEL technique, supported by electron microscopy. For 16 rats (aged 3, 8, or 104 weeks), nuclear fragmentation was assessed using the TUNEL technique (for 4 of the animals aged 8 weeks, incisor eruption was experimentally increased by trimming of teeth to the gingival margin--unimpeded eruption). A further 8 rats (aged 8 and 104 weeks) were employed for electron microscopy. For the incisor, prior to aging, and regardless of eruptive behavior (i.e., for both impeded and unimpeded incisors), there was little evidence of apoptosis in the periodontal ligament or gingival connective tissues. For the molar, apoptosis was also not usually detected when the teeth were erupting or in the mature, erupted state. In the aged animals, however, there was a marked increase in apoptosis (as assessed by the TUNEL technique) within the periodontal ligament and gingivae of both the molars and incisors (where eruption rates also increased). Nevertheless, electron microscopy indicated that significant numbers of apoptotic cells were only in the incisor periodontium. These findings are not consistent with the view that the periodontal fibroblasts provide a component of the force(s) responsible for eruption.

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