Brown, K.S., Evolution and development of the dentition, Birth Defects, Orig. Artic. Ser., 19, 29, 1983.
2.
Koch, W.E., Tissue interaction during in vitro odontogenesis, in Developmental Aspects of Oral Biology, Slavkin, H. C. and Bavetta, L. A., Eds., Academic Press, New York, 1972, 151.
3.
Kollar, E.J., Epithelial-mesenchymal interaction in the mammalian integument: tooth development as a model for instructive induction, in Epithelial-Mesenchymal Interactions in Development, Sawyer, R. H. and Fallon, J. F., Eds., Praeger Publishers, New York, 1983, 27.
4.
Lumsden, A.G.S., The neural crest contribution to tooth development in the mammalian embryo, in Developmental and Evolutionary Biology of the Neural Crest, Maderson, P. F. A., Ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1987, 261.
5.
Lumsden, A.G.S., Spatial organization of the epithelium and the role of neural crest cells in the initiation of the mammalian tooth germ, Development, 103 (Suppl.), 155, 1988.
6.
Ruch, J.V., Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in formation of mineralized tissues, in The Chemistry and Biology of Mineralized Tissues, Butler, W. T., Ed., EBSCO Media, Birmingham, AL, 1985, 54.
Scott, J., Urdea, M., Quiroga, M., Sanchez-Pescador, R., Fong, N., Selby, M., Rutter, W.J., and Bell, G.I., Structure of a mouse submaxillary messenger RNA encoding epidermal growth factor and seven related proteins, Science, 221, 236, 1983.
9.
Thesleff, I., Tissue interactions in tooth development in vitro, in Cell Interactions in Differentiation, Karkinen-Jaaskelainen, M., Saxen, L., and Weiss, L., Eds., Academic Press, New York, 1977, 191.
10.
Thesleff, I. and Hurmerinta, K., Tissue interaction in tooth development, Differentiation, 18, 75, 1981.
11.
McLaren, A., Growth from fertilization to birth in the mouse, in Embryogenesis in Mammals, Elliot, K. and O'Connor, M., Eds., CIBA Foundation Series, No. 40, Elsevier/North-Holland, London, 1976, 47.
12.
Pedersen, R.A., Early mammalian embryogenesis, in The Physiology of Reproduction, Knobil, E. and Neill, J., Eds., Raven Press, New York, 1988, 187.
13.
Wilkins, A.S., Genetic Analysis of Animal Development, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1986, 359.
14.
Snow, M.H.L., The embryonic cell lineage of mammals and the emergence of the basic body plan, in Molecular Determinants of Animals Form, Edelman, G. M., Ed., Alan R. Liss, New York, 1985, 73.
15.
Gehring, W.J., Homeotic genes, the Homeobox, and the spatial organization of the embryo, in The Harvey Lectures, Series 81, Alan R. Liss, New York, 1987, 153.
Hay, E.D., Cell-matrix interaction in the embryo: cell shape, cell surface, cell skeletons and their role in differentiation, in The Role of Extracellular Matrix in Development, Trelstad, R. L., Ed., Alan R. Liss, New York, 1984, 31.
18.
Rutter, W.J. and Pictet, R.L., Hormone-like factor(s) in mesenchymal epithelial interactions during embryonic development, in Embryogenesis in Mammals, Elliot, K. and O'Connor, M., Eds., CIBA Foundation Series, No. 40, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1976, 259.
19.
Slavkin, H.C., MacDougall, M., Zeichner-David, M., Oliver, P., Nakamura, M., and Snead, M.L., Molecular determinants of cranial neural crest-derived odontogenic ectomesenchyme during dentinogenesis, Am. J. Med. Genet. (Suppl.), 4, 7, 1988.
20.
Slavkin, H.C., Snead, M.L., Zeichner-David, M., Bringas, P., Jr., and Greenberg, G.L., Amelogenin gene expression during epithelial-mesenchymal interactions, in The Role of Extracellular Matrix in Development, Trelstad, R. L., Ed., Alan R. Liss, New York, 1984,221.
21.
Spemann, H., Embryonic Induction and Development, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1938.
22.
Davies, A.M., The trigeminal system: an advantageous experimental model for studying neuronal development, Development, 103 (Suppl.), 175, 1988.
23.
Gaunt, W.A., The development of the teeth and jaws of the albino mouse, Acta Anat., 57, 115, 1964.
24.
Slavkin, H.C., Embryonic tooth formation: a tool for developmental biology, Oral Sci. Rev., 4, 1, 1974.
25.
Hall, B.K., Tissue interactions in the development and evolution of the vertebrate head, in Development and Evolutionary Aspects of the Neural Crest, Waderson P. F. A., Ed., John Wiley & Sons, London, 1987, 215.
26.
Hall, B.K., The embryonic development of bone, Am. Sci., 76, 174, 1988.
27.
Slavkin, H.C., Bringas, P., Jr., Cummings, E., and Grodin, M.S., Initiation of quail and mouse mandibular chondrogenesis and osteogenesis in a serumless, chemically-defined medium, Calcif. Tissue Int., 34, 111, 1982.
28.
Slavkin, H.C., Honig, L.S., and Bringas, P., Jr., Experimental "dissection" of avian and murine tissue interactions using organ-culture in a serumless medium free from exogenous (non-defined) factors, in Factors and Mechanisms Influencing Bone Growth, Dixon, A. D. and Sarnat, B. G., Eds., Alan R. Liss, New York, 1982, 217.
29.
Slavkin, H.C., Gene regulation in the development of oral tissues, 1987 Kreshover Lecture, J. Dent. Res., 67, 1142, 1988.
30.
Slavkin, H.C., Bringas, P. Jr., Sasano, Y., and Mayo, M., Early embryonic mouse mandibular morphogenesis and cytodifferentiation in serumless, chemically-defined medium: a model for studies of autocrine and/or paracrine regulatory factors, J. Craniofac. Genet. Dev. Biol., in press.
31.
Slavkin, H.C., Sasano, Y., Kikunaga, S., Bessem, C., Bringas, P., Jr., Mayo, M., Luo, W., Mak, G., Rail, L., and Snead, M.L., Cartilage, bone and tooth induction during early embryonic mouse mandibular morphogenesis using serumless, chemically-defined medium, Connect. Tissue Res., in press.
32.
Mina, M. and Kollar, E.J., The induction of odontogenesis in non-dental mesenchyme combined with early murine mandibular arch epithelium, Arch. Oral Biol, 32, 123, 1987.
33.
Lumsden, A.G.S. and Buchanan, J.A.G., An experimental study of timing and topography of early tooth development in the mouse embryo with an analysis of the role of innervation, Arch. Oral Biol., 31, 301, 1986.
34.
Ruch, J.V., Lesot, H., Karcher-Djuricic, V., Meyer, J.M., and Olive, M., Facts and hypotheses concerning the control of odontoblast differentiation, Differentiation, 21, 7, 1982.
35.
Bissel, M.J., Hall, H.G., and Parry, G., How does the extracellular matrix direct gene expression?, J. Theor. Biol., 99, 31, 1982.
36.
Edelman, G.M., Cell adhesion and the molecular processes of morphogenesis, Annu. Rev. Biochem., 54, 135, 1985.
37.
McMahon, D. and West, C., Transduction of positional information during development, in The Cell Surface in Animal Embryogenesis, Poste, G. and Nicolson, G. L., Eds., Elsevier/North-Holland, New York, 1976, 449.
38.
Crossin, K.L., Hoffman, S., Grumet, M., Thiery, J.P., and Edelman, G.M., Site-restricted expression of cytotactin during development of the chick embryo, J. Cell Biol., 102, 1917, 1986.
39.
Chiquet-Ehrismann, R., Mackie, E.J., Pearson, C.A., and Sakakura, T., Tenascin: an extracellular matrix protein involved in tissue interactions during fetal development and oncogenesis, Cell, 47, 131, 1986.
40.
Slavkin, H.C., Snead, M.L., Zeichner-David, M., MacDougall, M., Fincham, A., Lau, E., Luo, W., Nakamura, M., Oliver, P., and Evans, J., Factors influencing expression of dental ECM biomineralization, in Cell and Molecular Biology of Hard Tissues, Ciba Foundation Symposium 136, Evered, D. and Harnett, S., Eds., John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, 1988, 22.
41.
Thesleff, I., Mackie, E., Vainio, S., and Chique-Ehrismann, R., Changes in the distribution of tenascin during tooth development, Development, 101, 289, 1987.
42.
Ruoslahti, E. and Pierschbacher, M.D., Arg-Gly-Asp: a versatile cell recognition signal, Cell, 44, 517, 1986.
43.
Yamada, K.M. and Kennedy, D.W., Dualistic nature of adhesive protein function: fibronectin and its biologically active peptide fragments can auto-inhibit fibronectin function, J. Cell Biol., 99, 29, 1984.
44.
Holland, P.W.H., Homeobox genes and the vertebrate head, Development, 103 (Suppl.), 17, 1988.
45.
Slavkin, H.C., Splice of life: towards understanding genetic determinants of oral diseases, Recent Adv. Dent. Res., 3(1), 42, 1989.
46.
Slavkin, H.C., Molecular biology of dental development: a review, in Biological Mechanisms of Tooth Eruption and Root Resorption, Davidovitch, Z., Ed., EBSCO Media, Birmingham, AL, 1988, 107.
47.
Butler, W.T., Brown, M.T., DiMuzio, M.T., Cothran W.G., and Linde, A., Multiple forms of rat dentin phosphoprotein, Arch. Biochem. Biophys., 225, 178, 1983.
48.
MacDougall, M., Zeichner-David, M., and Slavkin, H.C., Production and characterization of antibodies against murine dentin phosphoprotein, Biochem. J., 232, 493, 1985.
49.
MacDougall, M., Zeichner-David, M., Bringas, P., Jr., and Slavkin, H.C., Dentin phosphoprotein expression during in vitro mouse tooth organ culture, in The Chemistry and Biology of Mineralized Tissues, Butler, W. T., Ed., EBSCO Media, Birmingham, AL, 1985, 177.
50.
De Vries, I.G., Quartier, E., Boute, P., Wisse, E., and Coomans, D., Immunocytochemical localization of osteocalcin in developing rat teeth, J. Dent. Res., 66, 784, 1987.
51.
Finkleman, R.D. and Butler, W.T., Appearance of dentin gammacarboxyglutamic acid containing factors in developing rat molars in vitro, J. Dent. Res., 64, 1008, 1985.
52.
Jaenisch, R., Retroviruses and insertional mutagenesis in mice, in Molecular Determinants of Animal Form, Edelman, G. M., Ed., Alan R. Liss, New York, 1985, 47.
53.
Kratochwil, K., Dziadek, M., Lohler, J., Harbers, K., and Jaenisch, R., Normal epithelial branching morphogenesis in the absence of collagen I, Dev. Biol., 117, 596, 1986.
54.
Kratochwil, K. and Kollar E.J., Tooth development in the collagen 1-deficient HOV-13 mouse mutant, personal communication.
55.
Jaenisch, R., personal communication.
56.
Termine, J.D., Belcourt, A.B., Christner, P.J., Conn, K.M., and Nylen, M.U., Properties of dissociatively extracted fetal tooth matrix proteins. I. Principal molecular species in developing bovine enamel, J. Biol. Chem., 255, 9760, 1980.
57.
Fincham, A.G., Belcourt, A.B., Termine, J.D., Butler, W.T., and Cothran, W.C., Amelogenins sequence homologies in enamel matrix proteins from three mammalian species, Biochem. J., 211, 149, 1983.
58.
Christner, P.J., Lally, E.T., Miller, R.D., Leontzwich, P., Rosenbloom, J., and Herold, R.C., Monoclonal antibodies to different epitopes in amelogenins from fetal bovine teeth recognize high-molecular-weight components, Arch. Oral Biol, 30, 849, 1985.
59.
Rosenbloom, J., Lally, E.T., Dixon, M., Spemcer, A., and Herold, R., Phylogenetic distribution of enamel proteins: immunohistochemical localization with monoclonal antibodies indicates the evolutionary appearance of enamelins prior to amelogenins, Calcif. Tissue Int., in press.
60.
Shimokawa, H., Sobel, M.E., Sasaki, M., Termine, J.D., and Young, M.F., Heterogeneity of amelogenin mRNA in the bovine tooth germ, J. Biol. Chem., 262, 4042, 1987.
61.
Nanci, A., Bendayan, M., and Slavkin, H.C., Enamel protein biosynthesis and secretion in mouse incisor secretory ameloblasts as revealed by high-resolution immunocytochemistry, J. Histochem. Cytochem., 33, 1153, 1985.
62.
Snead, M.L., Zeichner-David, M., Chandra, T., Robson, K.J.H., Woo, S.L.C., and Slavkin, H.C., Construction and identification of mouse amelogenin cDNA clones, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 80, 7254, 1983.
63.
Lau, E.C., Mohandas, T.K., Shapiro, L.J., Slavkin, H.C., and Snead, M.L., Human and mouse amelogenin gene loci are on the sex chromosomes, Genomics, in press.
64.
Lau, E.C., Bessem, C., Slavkin, H.C., Zeichner-David, M., and Snead, M.L., Amelogenin antigenic domain defined by clonal epitope selection, Calcif. Tissue Int., 40, 231, 1987.
65.
Snead, M.L., Bringas, P., Jr., Bessem, C., and Slavkin, H.C., De novo gene expression detected by amelogenin gene transcript analysis, Dev. Biol., 104, 255, 1984.
66.
Snead, M.L., Luo, W., Lau, E.C., and Slavkin, H.C., Spatial-and temporal-restricted pattern for amelogenin gene expression during mouse molar tooth organogenesis, Development, 104, 77, 1988.
67.
Zeichner-David, M., MacDougall, M., and Slavkin, H.C., Enamelin gene expression during fetal and neonatal rabbit tooth organogenesis, Differentiation, 25, 148, 1983.
68.
Deutsch, D., Shapiro, L., Alayoff, A., Leviel, D., Yoeli, Z., and Arad, A., Protein and mineral changes during prenatal and postnatal development and mineralization of human deciduous enamel, in Tooth Enamel IV, Fearnhead, R. W. and Suga, S., Eds., Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1984, 234.
69.
Slavkin, H.C., Bessem, C., Bringas, P., Jr., Zeichner-David, M., Nanci, A., and Snead, M.L., Sequential expression and differential function of multiple enamel proteins during fetal, neonatal and early postnatal stages of mouse molar organogenesis, Differentiation, 37, 26, 1988.
70.
Zeichner-David, M., Vides, J., MacDougall, M., Fincham, A., Snead, M.L., Bessem, C., and Slavkin, H.C., Biosynthesis and characterization of rabbit tooth enamel extracellular matrix proteins, J. Biochem., 251, 631, 1988.
71.
Zeichner-David, M., MacDougall, M., Vides, J., Snead, M.L., Slavkin, H.C., Turkell, S.B., and Pavlova, A., Immunochemical and biochemical studies of human enamel proteins during neonatal development, J. Dent. Res., 66, 50, 1987.
72.
Kallenbach, E., Electron microscopy of the differentiating rat incisor ameloblast, J. Ultrastruct. Res., 35, 508, 1971.
73.
Slavkin, H.C., Amelogenesis in vitro, J. Dent. Res., Special Issue B, 58B, 735, 1979.
74.
Thesleff, I., Differentiation of odontogenic tissues in organ culture, Scand. J. Dent. Res., 84, 353, 1976.
75.
Evans, J., Bringas, P., Jr., Nakamura, M., Nakamura, E., Santos, V., and Slavkin, H.C., Metabolic expression of intrinsic developmental programs for dentin and enamel biomineralization in serumless, chemically-defined, organotypic culture, Calcif. Tissue Int., 42, 220, 1988.
76.
Bringas, P., Jr., Nakamura, M., Nakamura, E., Evans, J., and Slavkin, H.C., Ultrastructural analysis of enamel formation during in vitro development using chemically-defined medium, J. Scan. Microsc., 1, 1103, 1987.
77.
Partanen, A.M. and Thesleff, I., Levels and patterns of 125I-labeled transferrin binding in mouse embryonic teeth and kidneys at various developmental stages, Differentiation, 34, 18, 1987.
78.
Adamson, E.D., Deller, M.J., and Warchaw, J.B., Functional EGF receptors are present on mouse embryo tissues, Nature, 291, 656, 1981.
79.
Derynck, R., Transforming growth factor alpha, Cell, 54, 593, 1988.
80.
Ralph, L., Pictet, R., Githens, S., and Rutter, W., Glucocorticoids modulate the in vitro development of the embryonic rat pancreas, J. Cell Biol., 75, 398, 1977.
81.
Sporn, M.B., Roberts, A.B., Wakefield, L.M., and de Crombrugghe, B., Some recent advances in the chemistry and biology of transforming growth factor-beta, J. Cell Biol., 105, 1039, 1987.
82.
Yamada, M., Bringas, P., Jr., Grodin, M., MacDougall, M., and Slavkin, H.C., Developmental comparisons of murine secretory amelogenesis in vivo, as xenografts on chick chorio-allantoic membrane, band in vitro, Calcif. Tissue Int., 31, 161, 1980.
83.
Tomkins, G., The metabolic code, Science, 189, 760, 1975.
84.
Rail, L.B., Scott, J., Bell, G.I., Crawford, R.J., Penschow, J.D., Niall, H.D., and Coghlan, J.P., Mouse prepro-epidermal growth factor synthesis by the kidney and other tissues, Nature, 321, 228, 1985.
85.
Weeks, D.L. and Melton, D.A., A maternal mRNA localized to the vegetal hemisphere in Xenopus eggs codes for a growth factor related to TGF-β, Cell, 51, 861, 1987.
86.
Slack, J.M.W., Darlington, B.G., Heath, J.K., and Godsave, S.F., Mesoderm induction in early Xenopus embryos by heparin-binding growth factors, Nature, 326, 197, 1987.
87.
Smith, J.C., A mesorderm-inducing factor is produced by a Xenopus cell line, Development, 99, 3, 1987.
88.
Kimelman, D. and Kirschner, M., Synergistic induction of mesoderm by FGF and TGF-βand the identification of mRNA coding for FGF in the early Xenopus embryo, Cell, 51, 869, 1987.
89.
Rizzino, A., Early mouse embryos produce and release factors with transforming growth factor activity, In Vitro Cell Dev. Biol., 21, 531, 1985.
90.
Rizzino, A. and Bowen-Pope, D.F., Production of PDGF-like growth factors by embryonal carcinoma cells and binding of PDGF to their endoderm-like differentiated cells, Dev. Biol., 110, 15, 1985.
91.
Heath, J.K., Experimental analysis of teratocarcinoma cell multiplication and purification of ebryonal carcinoma-derived growth factor, in Teratocarcinomas and Embryonic Stem Cells: A Practical Approach, Robertson, E. J., Ed., IRL Press, Washington, D.C., 1987, 183.
92.
Rappolee, D.A., Mark, D., Banda, M.J., and Werb, Z., Wound macrophages express TGF-alpha and other growth factors in vivo: analysis by mRNA phenotyping, Science, 241, 708, 1988.
93.
Rappolee, D.A., Brenner, C.A., Schultz, R., Mark, D., and Werb, Z., Developmental expression of PDGF, TGF-alpha and TGFbeta genes in preimplantation mouse embryos, Science, in press.
94.
Jakobovitz, A., Shackleford, G.M., Varmus, H.E., and Martin, G.R., Two proto-oncogenes implicated in mammary carcinogenesis, int-1 1 and int-2, are independently regulated during mouse development, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 83, 7806, 1985.
95.
Cohen, S., Isolation of a mouse submaxillary gland protein accelerating incisor eruption and eyelid opening in the newborn animal, J. Biol. Chem., 237, 1555, 1962.
96.
Topham, R.T., Chiego, D.J., Jr., Gattone, V.H., II, Hinton, D.A., and Klein, R.M., The effect of epidermal growth factor on neonatal incisor differentiation in the mouse, Dev. Biol., 124, 532, 1987.
97.
Greenwald, I., Lin-2, a nematode homeotic gene is homologous to a set of mammalian proteins that includes epidermal growth factor, Cell, 43, 583, 1985.
98.
Wharton, K.A., Johansen, K.M., Xu, T., and Artavanis-Tsakonas, T., Nucleotide sequence from the neurogenic locus Notch implies a gene product that shares homology with proteins containing EGF-like repeats, Cell, 43, 567, 1985.
99.
Jones, F.S., Burgoon, M.P., Hoffman, S., Crossin, K.L., Cunningham, B.A., and Edelman, G.M., A cDNA clone for cytotactin contains sequences similar to epidermal growth factor-like repeats and segments of fibronectin and fibrinogen, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 2186, 1988.
100.
Coffey, R.J., Jr., Derynck, R., Wilcox, J.N., Bringman, T.S., Goustin, A.S., Moses, H.L., and Pittelkow, M.R., Production and auto-induction of transforming growth factor-A in human keratinocytes, Nature, 328, 817, 1987.
101.
Partanen, A.M. and Thesleff, I., Localization and quantization of 125I-epidermal growth factor binding in mouse embryonic tooth and other embryonic tissues at different developmental stages, Dev. Biol., 120, 186, 1987.
102.
Snead, M.L., Luo, W., Oliver, P., Nakamura, M., Don-Wheeler, G., Bessem, C., Bell, G.I., Rail, L.B., and Slavkin, H.C., Localization of epidermal growth factor precursor in tooth and lung during embryonic mouse development, Dev. Biol., 134, 420, 1989.
103.
Snead, M.L., Lau, E.C., Zeichner-David, M., Finchman, A.G., Woo, S.L.C., and Slavkin, H.C., DNA sequence for cloned cDNA for mouse amelogenin reveals the amino acid sequence for enamel-specific protein, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 129, 812, 1985.
104.
Alvesalo, L., and Port in, P., 47, XXY males: sex chromosomes and tooth size, Am. J. Hum. Genet., 32, 955, 1980.
105.
Sofaer, J.A., Aspects of the tabby-crinkled-downless syndrome. II. Observations on the reaction to changes of genetic background, J. Embryol. Exp. Morphol., 22, 207, 1969.
106.
Moore, G.E., Ivens, A., Chambers, J., Farrall, M., Williamson, R., Page, D.C., Bjornsson, A., Arnason, A., and Jensson, O., Linkage of an X-chromosome cleft palate gene, Nature, 326, 91, 1987.
107.
Prockop, D.J., Osteogenesis imperfecta: phenotypic heterogeneity, protein suicide, short and long collagen, Am. J. Hum. Genet., 36, 499, 1984.
108.
Gage, J.P., Dentinogenesis imperfecta: a new perspective, Aust. Dent. J., 30, 285, 1985.
109.
Bornstein, P., McKay, J., Morishima, J.K., Devarayalu, S., and Gelinas, R.E., Regulatory elements in the first intron contribute to transcriptional control of the human al(I) collagen gene, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 84, 8869, 1987.
110.
Lukinmaa, P.L., Ranta, H., and Vaheri, A., Osteogenesis imperfecta: fibronectin in dentin matrix, J. Craniofac. Genet. Dev. Biol., 1988.
111.
Ball, S.B., Cook, P.J.L., Mars, M., and Buckton, K.E., Linkage between dentinogenesis imperfecta and Gc, Ann. Hum. Genet., 46, 35, 1982.
112.
Boughman, J.A., Halloran, S.L., Rouslton, D., Schwartz, S., Susuki, J.B., Weitkamp, L.R., Wenk, R.E., Wooten, R., and Cohen, M., An autosomal-dominant form of juvenile periodontitis: its localization to chromosome 4 and linkage to dentinogenesis imperfecta and Gc, J. Craniofac. Genet. Dev. Biol., 6, 341, 1986.
113.
Utset, M.F., Awgulewitsch, A., Ruddle, F.H., and McGinnis, W., Region-specific expression of two mouse homeobox genes, Science, 235, 1379, 1987.
114.
Fainsod, A., Awgulewitsch, A., and Ruddle, F.H., Expression of the murine homeo box gene Hox 1.5 during embryogenesis, Dev. Biol., 124, 125, 1987.
115.
Deschamps, J., De Laaf, R., Joosen, L., Meijlink, F., and Destree, O., Abundant expression of homeobox genes in mouse embryonal carcinoma cell correlates with chemically induced differentiation, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 84, 1304, 1987.