Enamel,the inorganic tissue covering the crowns of teeth,is known for its remarkable resilience and hardness.These properties originate from its high proportion of mineralized matrix and complex internal microarchitec...Enamel,the inorganic tissue covering the crowns of teeth,is known for its remarkable resilience and hardness.These properties originate from its high proportion of mineralized matrix and complex internal microarchitecture.On an ultrastructural level,it consists of directionally arranged enamel prisms.Continuously growing rodent incisors are an exemplary case of this phenomenon.Their enamel has a consistent decussation pattern,providing teeth with extremely high resistance and ensuring they remain constantly sharp.While the decussation pattern has been described in detail,mechanisms behind its formation have not been experimentally proven.Here,we show that the highly organized enamel micropattern is generated by directional epithelial sliding of enamel-forming ameloblasts in vivo.Our results detail how enamel micropatterning stems from individual cell cluster segregation and subsequent reciprocal interweaving.Based on this determination,we introduce and experimentally demonstrate a new model of enamel decussation pattern formation.展开更多
基金supported by the Czech Science Foundation (23-06160S)by the Faculty of Medicine of Masaryk University (MUNI/A/1738/2024)。
文摘Enamel,the inorganic tissue covering the crowns of teeth,is known for its remarkable resilience and hardness.These properties originate from its high proportion of mineralized matrix and complex internal microarchitecture.On an ultrastructural level,it consists of directionally arranged enamel prisms.Continuously growing rodent incisors are an exemplary case of this phenomenon.Their enamel has a consistent decussation pattern,providing teeth with extremely high resistance and ensuring they remain constantly sharp.While the decussation pattern has been described in detail,mechanisms behind its formation have not been experimentally proven.Here,we show that the highly organized enamel micropattern is generated by directional epithelial sliding of enamel-forming ameloblasts in vivo.Our results detail how enamel micropatterning stems from individual cell cluster segregation and subsequent reciprocal interweaving.Based on this determination,we introduce and experimentally demonstrate a new model of enamel decussation pattern formation.