A gene critical to tooth formation expresses a protein that is then cleaved into 2 proteins with seemingly opposite functions, according to a University of Southern California-led team of dental researchers. The team’s study of the 2 proteins, dentin sialoprotein (DSP) and dentin phosphoprotein (DPP), has been accepted by the Journal of Biological Chemistry and is available on the journal’s Web site.
Lead author Michael Paine of the USC School of Dentistry said both proteins derive from the gene for dentin sialophosphoprotein, which plays an important role in the formation of tooth enamel and dentin. “We were able to dissect this gene into two different proteins and look at them individually,” Dr. Paine said. The researchers conducted animal studies in which either DSP or DPP were overexpressed in forming enamel during the period of tooth development. They found that overexpression of DSP increased the hardness of enamel and its rate of formation, while overexpression of DPP created pitted and chalky enamel that was more prone to fracture and wear.
(Source: USC News Service, August 31, 2005)