Abstract

In order to explore the possibility that phospholipids are differently expressed during the cascade of events leading to tooth formation, we decided to carry out simultaneous biochemical, histological and electron histochemical studies. High performance thin-layer chromatography and gas-liquid chromatography were used to compare the composition of embryonic mouse first molar tooth germs at day 18 of gestation (E18) and at birth (D1), erupting teeth at day 7 (D7) and erupted molars at day 21 (D21). For the latter, non-demineralized and EDTA-demineralized lipid extracts were analysed separately. Moreover, an ultrahistochemical study was carried out using the iodoplatinate reaction which retains and visualizes phospholipids. Developmentally regulated changes occurred and were closely correlated with an increase in cell membrane phospholipids. Gradual accumulation of phospholipids was identified in the extracellular matrix, at an early stage of tooth germ development within the basement membrane and later, as predentine/dentine and enamel components participating in mineralization processes. Matrix vesicles transiently present in dentine were partly responsible for the lipids that were detected. A first group of phospholipids including phosphatidylcholine as the major membrane-associated phospholipid and phosphatidylinositol as the intracellular second messenger increased by a factor of 2.3 between E18 and D21. This increase is probably associated with cell lengthening and was relatively modest compared with the higher increase detected for a second group of phospholipids, namely phosphatidylethanolamine (x4.8), phosphatidylserine (x 5.9) and sphingomyelin (x5.4). This second group of extracellular matrix-associated phospholipids constituted 68% of the demineralized lipid extract and, therefore, contributes to the mineralization of dental tissues.

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