Patterns of phenotypic expression of human junctional, gingival and reduced enamel epithelia in vivo and in vitro
- PMID: 1284954
Patterns of phenotypic expression of human junctional, gingival and reduced enamel epithelia in vivo and in vitro
Abstract
Epithelia differ regionally in their patterns of phenotypic expression. The junctional epithelium (JE) that attaches the oral mucosa to the teeth is a unique tissue that shows a pattern of differentiation unlike other oral epithelia and forms basal lamina against the non-vital tooth surface. The mechanisms that establish this unusual phenotype and the developmental origin of this epithelium are both uncertain. The formation of JE by downgrowth of the oral gingival epithelium (OGE) during tooth eruption has been suggested but morphological studies indicate that it may be derived from the reduced enamel epithelium (REE) that covers the crown of the unerupted tooth. These epithelia of potential origin differ in their developmental histories: intrinsic differences between them could thus significantly influence the phenotype of an epithelium formed from them. The patterns of phenotypic expression of specimens of dissected JE, OGE and REE, and of cell cultures of these epithelia grown under standardized conditions, were examined (1) by immunocytochemistry using monoclonal antibodies with specificity for individual cytokeratins, vimentin and ICAM-1, and (2) by two-dimensional SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. The results indicated that, in vivo, OGE expressed keratin markers typical of differentiating mucosal epithelium; JE and REE, in contrast, lacked expression of most such markers but expressed keratins typical of simple epithelia together with some undefined keratin peptides. All epithelia showed changes in vitro but OGE remained different from JE and REE. OGE lost expression of the differentiation markers K1, K10 and K13; it acquired some expression of K19, but less than JE and REE. Cultures of JE and REE retained some expression of ICAM-1 and K8 and K18, and consistently acquired high levels of vimentin expression. These findings indicate that differences persist in standardized culture conditions and that these are apparently of an intrinsic nature. They support a concept of the origins of JE from REE and suggest that the unusual in vivo phenotype of JE results partly from intrinsic differences acquired during its development.
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