Abstract

Abstract It has been suggested that vitamin D is involved in the process of cell differentiation and extracellular mineralization during tooth development. One of the best-defined molecular markers of the action of vitamin D is a calciumbinding protein of M, 28000 called calbindin D-28 K (CaBP 28 K). Since this protein is present in growing teeth, we have examined its synthesis in teeth from vitamin D-replete and -deplete rats by Western blotting and immunocytochemistry with an antiserum to CaBP 28 K purified from rat kidney. The CaBP 28 K present in the enamel organ is a single molecular species migrating near 30 kDa, similarly to the kidney protein. The differentiation and maturation of odontogenic cells were followed during early postnatal development (2–12 days) in rat molars. At the light-microscope level, CaBP 28 K was only found in a single cell-type, the ameloblasts. The expression of this protein appeared to be developmentally controlled, since its distribution varied with the cell stage and the functional steps of amelogenesis. The protein was localized in the basal compartment of ameloblasts from the presecretory stage. During the early secretory stage, the concentration of cytoplasmic CaBP 28 K formed a gradient from the apical to the basal pole of the ameloblasts. Staining appeared homogeneous in the cytoplasm of later secretory ameloblasts. CaBP 28 K was discontinuously distributed during the maturation stage. This discontinuity might be related to cyclical changes in mature ameloblasts. In all stages, ameloblasts from vitamin-D-deficient rats appeared depleted of CaBP 28 K.

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