Ultrastructure of developing tooth plates in the Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri (Osteichthyes: Dipnoi).

Tissue Cell

Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis, University of Queensland, Coopers Road, St. Lucia, Qld. 4072, Australia.

Published: December 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The lungfish dentition is explored in terms of its morphology, light microscopy, and ultrastructure, revealing a complex development involving dental lamina, mesenchyme cells, and unique enamel characteristics as they mature.
  • The presence of ameloblasts and osteoclasts indicates a dynamic process where enamel is secreted and bone is remodeled beneath the tooth plates.
  • Differences in the ultrastructure and mineralization of enamel, dentines, and bone are observed, highlighting that shared structures with other early vertebrates diminish as lungfish dentition matures.

Article Abstract

While the lungfish dentition is partially understood as far as morphology and light microscopic structure is concerned, the ultrastructure is not. Each tooth plate is associated with a dental lamina that develops from the inner layer of endodermal cells that form the oral epithelium. Dentines, bone and cartilage of the jaws differentiate from mesenchyme cells aggregating beneath the oral endothelium. Enamel, in the developing and in the mature form, has similarities to that of other early vertebrates, but unusual characters appear as development proceeds. Ameloblasts are capable of secreting enamel, and, with mononuclear osteoclasts, of remodelling the bone below the tooth plate. The forms of dentine, all based largely on an extracellular matrix of collagen and mineralised with biological apatite, differ from each other and from the underlying bone in the ultrastructure of associated cells and in the mineralised extracellular matrices produced. Cell processes emerging from the odontoblasts and from the osteoblasts vary in length, degree of branching and of anastomoses between the processes, although all of the cell types have large amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum. Mineralisation of the extracellular matrices varies among the enamel, dentines and bone in the tooth plate. In addition, the development of the hard tissues of the tooth plates indicates that many of the similarities in fine structure of the dentition in lungfish, to tissues in other fish and amphibia, apparent early in development, disappear as the dentition matures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0040-8166(03)00066-1DOI Listing

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