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Immunohistochemical and Western blot analyses of collar enamel in the jaw teeth of gars,Lepisosteus oculatus,an actinopterygian fish
Authors:Ichiro Sasagawa  Mikio Ishiyama  Hiroyuki Yokosuka  Masato Mikami  Hitoyata Shimokawa  Takashi Uchida
Affiliation:1. Advanced Research Center;2. Department of Histology;3. Department of Microbiology, School of Life Dentistry at Niigata, The Nippon Dental UniversityNiigataJapan;4. Department of Orofacial Development and Function, Graduate School, Tokyo Medical and Dental UniversityBunkyo-ku, TokyoJapan;5. Department of Oral Biology, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Hiroshima UniversityHiroshimaJapan
Abstract:Although most fish have no enamel layer in their teeth, those belonging to Lepisosteus (gars), an extant actinopterygian fish genus, do and so can be used to study amelogenesis. In order to examine the collar enamel matrix in gar teeth, we subjected gar teeth to light and electron microscopic immunohistochemical examinations using an antibody against bovine amelogenin (27?kDa) and antiserum against porcine amelogenin (25?kDa), as well as region-specific antibodies and antiserum against the C-terminus and middle region, and N-terminus of porcine amelogenin, respectively. The enamel matrix exhibited intense immunoreactivity to the anti-bovine amelogenin antibody and the anti-porcine amelogenin antiserum in addition to the C-terminal and middle region-specific antibodies, but not to the N-terminal-specific antiserum. These results suggest that the collar enamel matrix of gar teeth contains amelogenin-like proteins and that these proteins possess domains that closely resemble the C-terminal and middle regions of porcine amelogenin. Western blot analyses of the tooth germs of Lepisosteus were also performed. As a result, protein bands with molecular weights of 78?kDa and 65?kDa were clearly stained by the anti-bovine amelogenin antibody as well as the antiserum against porcine amelogenin and the middle-region-specific antibody. It is likely that the amelogenin-like proteins present in Lepisosteus do not correspond to the amelogenins found in mammals, although they do possess domains that are shared with mammalian amelogenins.
Keywords:Amelogenins  bony fish  collar enamel  immunolabeling  Lepisosteus
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