Archives of Histology and Cytology
Online ISSN : 1349-1717
Print ISSN : 0914-9465
ISSN-L : 0914-9465
Original articles
Abortive Secretion of an Enamel Matrix in the Inner Enamel Epithelial Cells During an Enameloid Formation in the Gar-Pike, Lepisosteus oculatus (Holostei, Actinopterygii)
Mikio ISHIYAMAToshihiko INAGEHitoyata SHIMOKAWA
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2001 Volume 64 Issue 1 Pages 99-107

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Abstract
The tooth in the gar-pike, Lepisosteus oculatus, an actinopterygian fish, is characterized by the occurrence of both enamel and enameloid, the former covering the tooth shaft and the latter, the tooth cap. Our previous research demonstrated that the enamel in this species was, as in the lungfish, immunoreactive for amelogenin, indicating its homologous nature with the mammalian tooth enamel, whereas the enameloid was completely immunonegative. The present study demonstrates that, during the early maturation stage of the enameloid formation, the inner enamel epithelial cells (IEECs) synthesize through a well-developed Golgi apparatus a fine-granular substance which is intensely immunoreactive for amelogenin. This substance was accumulated in a large saccule extended in a suprabasal zone of the cell; we were unable to find any morphological sign indicating a connection of the substance with the enameloid matrix. The abortive secretion of the enamel matrix-like substance in the IEEC during an enameloid formation was considered to be an instance of rudimental enamel formation. In the gar-pike, the synthesis of amelogenin in the IEEC has been demonstrated to occur independently from that of the enameloid matrix. The present findings demonstrate a prominent difference between the tooth enamel and enameloid.
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© 2001 by International Society of Histology and Cytology
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