Abstract

Calretinin is a 29-kDa calcium-binding protein abundantly expressed in central and peripheral neural tissues. The aim here was to determine its expression during various stages of odontogenesis. Five categories of embryonic (E) and postnatal (P) rats at various ages (E17, E18, E20, P0, and P7), both male and female, were used to represent the various stages of molar tooth development. The heads of the experimental animals were harvested at the appropriate time and each was cut mid-sagittally and coronally to locate the tooth germs. Selected sections were stained immunohistochemically with polyclonal rabbit anticalretinin at a concentration of 1:25 after microwave irradiation. The results showed that calretinin is distributed widely in epithelium-derived tissues during odontogenesis in rat molar tooth germs. It was expressed focally in the dental lamina, outer enamel epithelium, stellate reticulum and stratum intermedium at different stages. In contrast, it was expressed diffusely and intensely in the inner enamel epithelium and presecretory ameloblasts, although it was discontinuous over the cusp tips. In the secretory ameloblasts, the staining was less intense, being restricted to the cytoplasm, including Tomes' processes. This distribution suggests that calretinin may play a part in enamel formation.

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