Rochester, USC Collaboration Discovers Why Teeth Form Single Row
Study also uncovers how each tooth signals the next to start growing. 4/01/09
By Greg Williams, University of Rochester
A
system of opposing genetic forces determines why mammals develop a
single row of teeth, while sharks sport several, according to a study
published February 26 in the journal Science. When completely
understood, the genetic program described in the study may help guide
efforts to re-grow missing teeth and prevent cleft palate, one of the
most common birth defects.
Gene
expression is the process by which information stored in genes is
converted into proteins that make up the body’s structures and carry
its messages. As the baby’s face takes shape in the womb, the
development of teeth and palate are tightly controlled in space and
time by gene expression. Related abnormalities result in the
development of teeth outside of the normal row, missing teeth and cleft
palate. The new insights suggest ways to combat these malformations.
The
current study adds an important detail to the understanding of the
interplay between biochemicals that induce teeth formation, and others
that restrict it, to result in the correct pattern. Specifically,
researchers discovered that turning off a single gene in mice resulted
in development of extra teeth, next to and inside of their first
molars. While the study was in mice, past studies have shown that the
involved biochemical players are active in humans as well.
“This
finding was exciting because extra teeth developed from tissue that
normally does not give rise to teeth,” said Rulang Jiang, associate
professor of Biomedical Genetics in the Center for Oral Biology at the
University of Rochester Medical Center and corresponding author on the Science
paper. “It takes the concerted actions of hundreds of genes to build a
tooth, so it was amazing to find that deleting one gene caused the
activation of a complete tooth developmental program outside of the
normal tooth row in those mice. Finding out how the extra teeth
developed will reveal how nature makes a tooth from scratch, which will
guide tooth regeneration research.”
Along
with Jiang, the study’s authors included Zunyi Zhang and Yu Lan within
the Center for Oral Biology and Department of Biomedical Genetics at
the University of Rochester Medical Center and Yang Chai, director of
the Center for Craniofacial Molecular Biology at University of Southern
California School of Dentistry in Los Angeles.
“We
helped to characterize this mutant model and found that the Osr2 gene
plays a crucial role to control tooth and palate development,” Chai
said. “With this information, we will be able to prevent and possibly
rescue developmental defects. This study also offers a guide for tooth
regeneration.”
In the study, the
team generated mice that lacked the oddskipped related-2 (Osr2) gene,
which encodes one of many transcription factors that turn genes on or
off. “Knocking out” (deleting) the Osr2 gene resulted in cleft palate,
a birth defect where the two halves of the roof of the mouth fail to
join up properly, leaving a gap. Secondly, and surprisingly, the Osr2
“knockout” mice developed teeth outside of the normal tooth row. The
team decided to focus the research first on the effect of Osr2 on teeth
patterning (versus cleft palate) because much more was known at the
time about teeth development pathways.
Although
teeth usually do not become visible until after birth, their formation
starts early in development. Teeth develop from the epithelium and
mesenchyme, two key tissue layers within the mammalian embryo. The
first sign of tooth development in mammals is the thickening of the
epithelium along the jaw line to form a band of cells called the dental
lamina. Because all teeth subsequently form from the dental lamina, the
assumption was that some special quality of epithelial cells there made
them “tooth competent.” Classical experiments, however, found that the
developing tooth mesenchyme was capable of inducing tooth formation
from epithelial tissues that normally would not participate in tooth
development. Researchers confirmed that it was indeed the mesenchyme
that carried tooth initiation signals later in development, but how
those signals were restricted to the area beneath the tooth row was
unknown.
Past studies in other labs
had shown bone morphogenic protein 4 (BMP4) to be an important factor
for the initiation of teeth, and that a protein called Msx1 amplifies
the BMP4 tooth-generating signal. Jiang and colleagues suggested for
the first time that some unknown factor was restricting the growth of
teeth into one row by opposing the Bmp4 signal.
The
current study provides the first solid proof that the precise space
where mammals can develop teeth (the “tooth morphogenetic field”) is
shaped and restricted by the effect of Osr2 on the expression of the
Bmp4 gene within the mesenchymal cell layer. Jiang’s team has shown not
only that removing the Osr2 gene results in extra teeth outside of the
normal row, but also that Osr2 is expressed in increasing concentration
in the jaw mesenchyme as you move from the cheek toward the tongue in
the mouse embryo, the exact opposite of the BMP4 concentration
gradient. Osr2 restricts Bmp4 expression to the tooth mesenchyme under
the dental lamina, and in Osr2’s absence, Bmp4 gene expression expands
into the jaw mesenchyme outside of the tooth row.
A
second major finding of the study backs up another emerging theory
which holds that careful regulation of competing pro- and anti-tooth
initiation signals controls how mammalian teeth come one by one in
sequence. As each tooth develops, something must prevent it from
forming too close to the next or mammals would have no gaps between
their teeth. When this mechanism occasionally falters, adjacent teeth
come in fused together. Because evolution is not perfect, wisdom teeth
(third molars) often come in too close to their predecessors, and must
be pulled to make space.
Jiang
and colleagues also engineered a group of mice with both the Osr2 and
Msx1 genes removed. While mice without Msx1 failed to grow any teeth,
mice lacking both Msx1 and Osr2 grew the first molars, but no
additional teeth. Thus, without Osr2, enough BMP4 was expressed for the
first molar teeth to grow, but without Msx1, the BMP4 signal was not
amplified to the point where it could kick off the next tooth in the
row. With these results, Jiang argues that BMP4 cooperates with other
factors to create a temporary zone around each tooth where no other
tooth can grow. When the tooth gets closer to maturity, Msx1 overwhelms
decreasing levels of inhibitory factors to start the BMP4-driven
development of the next tooth. Because the jaw is growing at the same
time teeth are forming, it follows that each tooth must also receive
signals that enough jaw has grown in for the next tooth to start
forming atop it.
The implications
of the current results may go beyond tooth development, researchers
said. Because of the work of Jiang and fellow researchers, some of the
biochemical pathways involved in cleft lip/cleft palate development are
now recognized, and may include BMP4, Msx1 and OSR2 as well as several
others. In humans, Msx1 mutations have been linked with cleft
lip/palate and with the failure to develop one or more teeth. In the
next phase of the team’s work, researchers will look at what other
factors may be regulated by Msx1 and Osr2 to begin pinpointing the
genetic network that controls teeth patterning and palate development.
Their goal is to manipulate stem cells to treat malformations and to
develop prevention strategies for cleft palate (e.g. the inclusion of
folic acid in prenatal vitamins prevents neural tube defects in some
cases). Cleft lip/palate occurs one in 700 live births.
“Beyond
medical applications, our results suggest that diversity in the number
of tooth rows across species may be due to evolutionary changes in the
control of the BMP4/Msx1 pathway,” Jiang said. “In mammals, Osr2
suppresses this pathway to restrict teeth within a single row.”