Apoptosis of odontoclasts under physiological root resorption of human deciduous teeth
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
This study was designed to establish the apoptosis of odontoclasts during physiological root resorption of human deciduous teeth. Deciduous teeth were fixed, decalcified, and embedded in paraffin for immunohistochemical (IHC) observations and in Epon for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Apoptotic cells were identified by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick-end labeling (TUNEL), and then tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity was determined on the same sections. Epon-embedded specimens were sectioned serially into 0.5-μm semithin sections; some of these sections were re-embedded in Epon, sectioned into 0.1-μm ultrathin sections, and observed by TEM. IHC revealed that the nuclei of TRAP-positive odontoclasts on the dentine were generally TUNEL-negative. Around these odontoclasts, a few TRAP-positive structures were present together with TUNEL-positive structures, e.g., a TRAPpositive structure with one TUNEL-positive nucleus, a TRAP-positive structure with one TUNEL-positive nucleus plus one or two TUNEL-negative nuclei, or a TRAP-positive structure with no nucleus. By TEM, some odontoclasts showed nuclear fragments including compacted chromatin. The results suggest that, during apoptosis, odontoclasts fragment into variously sized cellular parts including three or fewer nuclei.
- Springerの論文
Springer | 論文
- Comparisons of germination traits of alpine plants between fellfield and snowbed habitats
- Photoreceptor Images of Normal Eyes and of Eyes with Macular Dystrophy Obtained In Vivo with an Adaptive Optics Fundus Camera
- Effect of Electrical Stimulation on IGF-1 Transcription by L-Type Calcium Channels in Cultured Retinal Muller Cells
- In Vivo Measurements of Cone Photoreceptor Spacing in Myopic Eyes from Images Obtained by an Adaptive Optics Fundus Camera
- Optical Quality of the Eye Degraded by Time-Varying Wavefront Aberrations with Tear Film Dynamics