AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on the little-explored development of the oral vestibule and its relationship with dental lamina in field voles, providing insights into comparative dental development.
  • The research shows that the upper vestibular lamina connects with the antemolar part of the dental lamina, similar to findings in mice, but later regresses, complicating the understanding of their developmental interactions.
  • Apoptosis and mitosis do not significantly influence the upper oral vestibule's formation compared to tooth development, suggesting that the buccal vestibule's development is primarily due to head growth and cell differentiation.

Article Abstract

Formation of the oral vestibule is ignored in most studies on tooth development, although dental and vestibular lamina are closely related to each other. Knowledge about morphogenetic processes shaping the oral vestibule is missing almost completely. The aim of this study was to assess the developmental relationship between dental and vestibular lamina as well as formation of the oral vestibule in the upper jaw of the field vole (Microtus agrestis), a small rodent representing an attractive model species for comparative dental studies. Three-dimensional reconstruction revealed that the upper vestibular lamina of the vole joins the antemolar part of the diastemal dental lamina, similar to mouse. Later, this lamina complex regresses and the vestibular lamina is separated from the molar epithelium. Participation of the vestibular lamina in dental lamina formation, as hypothesized for mouse, therefore remains unclear. Except for increased apoptosis in the regressing diastemal dental lamina, spatial segregation of mitoses or apoptoses could be detected neither in the jaw arch epithelium nor in the adjacent mesenchyme. Therefore, in contrast to tooth primordia, apoptosis and mitosis seem to play a minor role in shaping of the upper oral vestibule. The buccal vestibule develops secondarily, probably in consequence of general growth of the head and localized differentiation of cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmor.10356DOI Listing

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