Naama C Weksler’s research while affiliated with University of California, Berkeley and other places

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Publications (1)


Modulation of tooth regeneration through opposing responses to Wnt and BMP signals in teleosts
  • Article
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December 2023

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101 Reads

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3 Citations

Development

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Craig T Miller

Most vertebrate species undergo tooth replacement throughout adult life. This process is marked by the shedding of existing teeth and the regeneration of tooth organs. However, little is known about the genetic circuitry regulating tooth replacement. Here, we tested whether fish orthologs of genes known to regulate mammalian hair regeneration have effects on tooth replacement. Using two fish species that demonstrate distinct modes of tooth regeneration, threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) and zebrafish (Danio rerio), we found that transgenic overexpression of four different genes changed tooth replacement rates in the direction predicted by a hair regeneration model: Wnt10a and Grem2a increased tooth replacement rate, whereas Bmp6 and Dkk2 strongly inhibited tooth formation. Thus, similar to known roles in hair regeneration, Wnt and BMP signals promote and inhibit regeneration, respectively. Regulation of total tooth number was separable from regulation of replacement rates. RNA sequencing of stickleback dental tissue showed that Bmp6 overexpression resulted in an upregulation of Wnt inhibitors. Together, these data support a model in which different epithelial organs, such as teeth and hair, share genetic circuitry driving organ regeneration.

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Citations (1)


... Knockdown of wnt10a in zebrafish embryos also impaired normal tooth development, arrested tooth development at 5 dpf and decreased the expression levels of additional tooth development genes like msx1, dlx2b, eda, and axin2 at 2 dpf (Yuan et al., 2017). Interestingly, upon wnt10a overexpression, adult zebrafish have increased tooth replacement rates (Square et al., 2023) and 2 dpf zebrafish embryos have increased expression levels of msx1, dlx2b, eda and axin2 (Yuan et al., 2017), confirming its function during tooth development. It seems that tooth regeneration is modulated in a similar fashion as hair (both epithelial appendages) with respect to the known opposing roles of the Wnt and BMP pathways. ...

Reference:

The fundamentals of WNT10A
Modulation of tooth regeneration through opposing responses to Wnt and BMP signals in teleosts

Development