Correlated biochemical and radioautographic studies of protein turnover in developing rat incisor enamel following pulse‐chase labeling with L‐[35S]‐ and L‐[methyl‐3H]‐methionine
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- molecular and-cellular-biology
- Published by Wiley in The Anatomical Record
- Vol. 232 (1) , 1-14
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.1092320102
Abstract
The movement of proteins into and out of enamel was followed over time using a highly sensitive microprecipitation technique to quantify the amount of TCA-insoluble radioactivity present within small pieces of freeze-dried enamel and cells (enamel organ) dissected from the mandibular incisors of rats injected with L-[35S]-methionine. Conventional image processing techniques were also used to estimate the number of silver grains over enamel and cells in radioautographs of mandibular incisors from rats similarly injected with L-[methyl3H]-methionine. Data from both techniques indicated that the average half-life for labeled proteins secreted into enamel was about 8.9 days. Typically, radioactive proteins accumulated in increasing amounts for 8 hours after which they were lost slowly up to 4 days and more rapidly thereafter when enamel formed during the secretory stage underwent maturation. The half-life for radioactive proteins in cells was only about 20.7 hours. No significant accumulation of radioactivity could be detected in the TCA-soluble or TCA-insoluble fractions of cells as enamel development proceeded. Results from this study suggest that radioautographs provide an accurate estimate of changes occurring to proteins in enamel and cells except at early time intervals (less than 1 hour) when a high percentage of total radioactivity is present within the TCA-soluble fraction of cells.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Degradation and loss of matrix proteins from developing enamelThe Anatomical Record, 1989
- Biosynthesis and secretion of enamel proteins in the rat incisorThe Anatomical Record, 1989
- Extraction of carbon 14‐labeled compounds from plant tissue during processing for electron microscopyJournal of Electron Microscopy Technique, 1989
- Proteins in the Enamel Fluid of Immature Porcine TeethJournal of Dental Research, 1987
- Tracer, Cytochemical, and Freeze-fracture Study on the Mechanisms whereby Secretory Ameloblasts Absorb Exogeneous ProteinsCells Tissues Organs, 1984
- Radioautography of rat incisor dentin as a continuous record of the incorporation of a single dose of 3H‐labeled proline and tyrosineJournal of Anatomy, 1982
- Ultrastructural and cytochemical observations on the alternating morphologic changes of the ameloblasts at the stage of enamel maturation.Archivum histologicum japonicum, 1980
- Uptake of32P-labelled phosphate into developing rat incisor enamelCalcified Tissue International, 1974
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970
- The absorptive activity of ameloblasts during the maturation of enamelThe Anatomical Record, 1967