Abstract
Ruthenium hexammine trichloride (RHT) used as a probe to visualize anion groups in the predentine and dentine of rat incisors, showed a complex distribution pattern including: (i) intercellular proteoglycans (Pg), detected in the predentine as granules 10–15 nm in diameter and as filaments. Non-aggregating Pg was observed in the spaces between collagen fibres as an amorphous group substance. The dentine included smaller RHT-positive granules, observed after thin-section demineralization; (ii) pericellular aggregates, 30–50 nm in diameter, which were absent at the onset of dentinogenesis but appeared when the mantle dentine started to mineralize; (iii) discontinuous staining of the cell coat along the plasma-membrane of the odontoblast process and of the membrane itself. All these RHT-positive components might be Pg and/or sialoglyconjugates and glyco- or phospholipids present on the plasma membrane.
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