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Publication : Semaphorin 3A controls timing and patterning of the dental pulp innervation.

First Author  Moe K Year  2012
Journal  Differentiation Volume  84
Issue  5 Pages  371-9
PubMed ID  23142733 Mgi Jnum  J:191210
Mgi Id  MGI:5461255 Doi  10.1016/j.diff.2012.09.003
Citation  Moe K, et al. (2012) Semaphorin 3A controls timing and patterning of the dental pulp innervation. Differentiation 84(5):371-9
abstractText  Timing and patterning of dental pulp innervation are strictly spatio-temporally regulated but it is still not known how they are controlled at molecular level. We analyzed postnatal innervation of the dental pulp in the mandibular first molar of mice deficient for Semaphorin 3A (Sema3A) axon repellant molecule. Immunohistochemical localization of nerve fibers on serial sections covering the whole tooth germs using anti-peripherin antibody revealed that nerve fibers were prematurely present within the preodontoblast layer next to the inner enamel epithelium already at PN0 in Sema3A(-/-) mice. In contrast, in the wild-type (Sema3A(+/+)) mice nerve fibers were seen in the pulp only after enamel formation at PN3. The nerves in Sema3A(-/-) pulp were notably defasciculated and thinner compared to that of Sema3A(+/+) mice. A premature formation of an abnormal, enlarged nerve plexus with a high number of arborizations was apparent in the pulp-dentin border target area in Sema3A(-/-) already at PN2 whereas in the wild-type mice the first sign of plexus formation was seen at PN7. The expression of mRNAs for Ngf, Gdnf and Ncam neuroregulatory molecules in mandibular molar as well as receptors for neurotrophic factors and class 3 semaphorins including Sema3A (TrkA, p75, TrkB, TrkC, Ret, Npn1, Npn2, PlxA4) in trigeminal ganglia were not altered in the Sema3A(-/-) mice. Collectively, this data show that Sema3A serves an essential role in molar tooth pulp innervation controlling the timing of nerve fiber penetration into the pulp, their patterning and the formation of nerve plexus at pulp-dentin border area, and provide further support for the hypothesis that tooth innervation is regulated by the coordinated activity of locally expressed neuroregulatory molecules exerting positive and negative influences on growing dental nerve fibers.
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