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Rodent incisors grow throughout adult life, but are prevented from becoming excessively long by constant abrasion, which is facilitated by the absence of enamel on one side of the incisor. Here we report that loss-of-function of sprouty genes, which encode antagonists of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling, leads to bilateral enamel deposition, thus impeding incisor abrasion and resulting in unchecked tooth elongation. We demonstrate that sprouty genes function to ensure that enamel-producing ameloblasts are generated on only one side of the tooth by inhibiting the formation of ectopic ameloblasts from self-renewing stem cells, and that they do so by preventing the establishment of an epithelial-mesenchymal FGF signaling loop. Interestingly, although inactivation of Spry4 alone initiates ectopic ameloblast formation in the embryo, the dosage of another sprouty gene must also be reduced to sustain it after birth. These data reveal that the generation of differentiated progeny from a particular stem cell population can be differently regulated in the embryo and adult.
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Development ePress online publication date 12 Dec 2007
doi: 10.1242/dev.015081
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Research article
An FGF signaling loop sustains the generation of differentiated progeny from stem cells in mouse incisors
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: gail.r.martin{at}ucsf.edu)
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F. Edwin, K. Anderson, C. Ying, and T. B. Patel
Intermolecular Interactions of Sprouty Proteins and Their Implications in Development and Disease
Mol. Pharmacol.,
October 1, 2009;
76(4):
679 - 691.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. Lagha, J. D. Kormish, D. Rocancourt, M. Manceau, J. A. Epstein, K. S. Zaret, F. Relaix, and M. E. Buckingham
Pax3 regulation of FGF signaling affects the progression of embryonic progenitor cells into the myogenic program
Genes & Dev.,
July 1, 2008;
22(13):
1828 - 1837.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007