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Journal Article

LEF1 is a critical epithelial survival factor during tooth morphogenesis

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Grosschedl,  Rudolf
Department of Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Sasaki, T., Ito, Y., Xu, X., Han, J., Bringas, P., Maeda, T., et al. (2005). LEF1 is a critical epithelial survival factor during tooth morphogenesis. Developmental Biology, 278, 130-143.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-002B-93D4-F
Abstract
LEF1 is a cell-type-specific transcription factor and mediates Wnt signaling pathway by association with its co-activator β-catenin. Wnt signaling is known to be critical for the specification of cranial neural crest (CNC) cells and may regulate the fate diversity of the CNC during craniofacial morphogenesis. Loss of Lef1 results in arrested tooth development at the late bud stage and LEF1 is required for a relay of a Wnt signaling to a cascade of FGF signaling activities to mediate the epithelial-mesenchymal interaction during tooth morphogenesis. It remains unclear, however, what is the cellular mechanism of LEF1 signaling in regulating tooth morphogenesis. To test the hypothesis that LEF1 signaling regulates the fate of the dental epithelial and the CNC-derived mesenchymal cells during tooth morphogenesis, we investigated and compared the cellular migration, proliferation, and apoptotic activity within the tooth germ between the wild-type and Lef1 null mutant mice. Using the Wnt1-Cre/R26R transgenic system for indelibly marking the progenies of CNC cells, we show that there is no CNC migration defect in the Lef1 null mutant mice, indicating that the arrest in tooth development is not the result of shortage of the CNC contribution into the first branchial arch in the Lef1 mutant. Furthermore, there is no alteration in cell proliferation or condensation of the CNC-derived dental mesenchyme in the Lef1 null mutant, suggesting that LEF1 may not affect the cell cycle progression of the multipotential CNC cells during tooth morphogenesis. Importantly, apoptotic activity is significantly increased within the dental epithelium in the Lef1 null mutant mice. As the result of this increased cell death, the bud stage tooth germ fails to advance to the cap stage in the absence of Lef1. Inhibition of apoptotic activity by FGF4 rescues the tooth development in the Lef1 null mutant. Our studies suggest that LEF1 is a critical survival factor for the dental epithelial cells during tooth morphogenesis.