Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Margarita Zeichner-David is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Margarita Zeichner-David.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1985

DNA sequence for cloned cDNA for murine amelogenin reveal the amino acid sequence for enamel-specific protein

Malcolm L. Snead; Eduardo C. Lau; Margarita Zeichner-David; Alan G. Fincham; Savio L. C. Woo; Harold C. Slavkin

Enamel is the unique and highly mineralized extracellular matrix that covers vertebrate teeth. Amelogenin proteins represent the predominate subfamily of gene products found in developing mammalian enamel, and are implicated in the regulation of the formation of the largest hydroxyapatite crystals in the vertebrate body. Previous attempts to isolate, purify and characterize amelogenins extracted from developing matrix have proven difficult. We now have determined the DNA sequence for a cDNA for the 26-kDa class of murine amelogenin and deduced its corresponding amino acid sequence. The murine amino acid sequence is homologous to bovine or porcine amelogenins extracted from developing enamel matrices. However, an additional 10-residues were found at the carboxy terminus of the murine amelogenin. This is the most complete sequence database for amelogenin peptides and the only DNA sequence for enamel specific genes.


Calcified Tissue International | 1994

Isolation and characterization of a mouse amelogenin expressed in Escherichia coli

James P. Simmer; Eduardo C. Lau; C. C. Hu; T. Aoba; M. Lacey; D. Nelson; Margarita Zeichner-David; Malcolm L. Snead; Harold C. Slavkin; Alan G. Fincham

A mouse cDNA encoding a 180 amino acid amelogenin was subcloned into the pET expression plasmid (Novagen, Madison, WI) for production in Escherichia coli. A simple growth and purification protocol yields 20–50 mg of 95–99% pure recombinant amelogenin from a 4.5-liter culture. This is the first heterologous expression of an enamel protein. The expressed protein was characterized by partial Edman sequencing, amino acid composition analysis, SDS-PAGE, Western blotting, laser desorption mass spectrometry, and hydroxyapatite binding. The recombinant amelogenin is 179 amino acids in length, has a molecular weight of 20,162 daltons, and hydroxyapatite binding properties similar to the porcine 173 residue amelogenin. Solubility analyses showed that the bacterially expressed protein is only sparingly soluble in the pH range of 6.4–8.0 or in solutions 20% saturated with ammonium sulfate. The purified protein was used to generate rabbit polyclonal anti-amelogenin antibodies which show specific reaction to amelogenins in both Western blot analyses of enamel extracts and in immunostaining of developing mouse molars.


Developmental Dynamics | 2003

Role of Hertwig's Epithelial Root Sheath Cells in Tooth Root Development

Margarita Zeichner-David; Keiji Oishi; Zhengyan Su; Vassili Zakartchenko; Li-Sha Chen; Higinio Arzate; Pablo Bringas

During tooth development, after the completion of crown formation, the apical mesenchyme forms the developing periodontium while the inner and outer enamel epithelia fuse below the level of the crown cervical margin to produce a bilayered epithelial sheath termed Hertwigs epithelial root sheath (HERS). The role of HERS cells in root formation is widely accepted; however, the precise function of these cells remains controversial. Functions suggested have ranged from structural (subdivide the dental ectomesenchymal tissues into dental papilla and dental follicle), regulators of timing of root development, inducers of mesenchymal cell differentiation into odontoblasts and cementoblasts, to cementoblast cell precursors. The characterization of the HERS phenotype has been hindered by the small amount of tissue present at a given time during root formation. In this study, we report the establishment of an immortal HERS‐derived cell line that can be maintained in culture and then induced to differentiate in vitro. Characterization of the HERS phenotype using reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction and Western blot immunostaining suggests that HERS cells initially synthesize and secrete some enamel‐related proteins such as ameloblastin, and then these cells appear to change their morphology and produce a mineralized extracellular matrix resembling acellular cementum. These studies suggest that the acellular and cellular cementum are synthesized by two different types of cells, the first one by HERS‐derived cementoblasts and the later by neural crest‐derived cementoblasts. Developmental Dynamics 228:651–663, 2003.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1989

Human and mouse cementum proteins immunologically related to enamel proteins.

Harold C. Slavkin; Conny Bessem; Alan G. Fincham; Pablo Bringas; Valentino Santos; Malcolm L. Snead; Margarita Zeichner-David

SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, immunoblot and amino acid composition analyses were applied to human and mouse acellular cementum proteins immunologically related to enamelins and amelogenins. In this analysis, anti-mouse amelogenin, anti-human enamelin and synthetic peptide (e.g., -LPPHPGHPGYIC-) antibodies were shown to cross-react with tooth crown-derived enamelin with a molecular mass of 72,000 Da (72 kDa), amelogenins (26 kDa), and also to four human cementum proteins (72, 58, 50 and 26 kDa) and two mouse cementum proteins (72 and 26 kDa). Each of the antibodies recognized tooth root-derived cementum polypeptides which share one or more epitopes with tooth crown-derived enamel proteins. The molecular mass and isoelectric points for crown-derived and root-derived enamel-related proteins were similar. Analysis of human and mouse cementum proteins revealed a characteristic amino acid composition enriched in glutamyl, serine, glycine, alanine, proline, valine and leucine residues; compared to the major enamel protein amelogenin, cementum proteins were low in proline, histidine and methionine. The human and mouse putative intermediate cementum proteins appear to represent a distinct class of enamel-related proteins. Moreover, these results support the hypothesis that epithelial root sheath epithelia express several cementum proteins immunologically related to canonical enamel proteins.


Matrix Biology | 2001

Is there more to enamel matrix proteins than biomineralization

Margarita Zeichner-David

Enamel proteins are proteins synthesized by ameloblast cells. These proteins are secreted into the enamel extracellular matrix where they nucleate and regulate the growth of hydroxyapatite crystals to form the mineralized enamel covering the crown of the teeth. Although the exact role of these proteins in enamel mineralization is just beginning to be elucidated, new studies suggest that these proteins might have functions outside enamel formation. Furthermore, extracts of enamel proteins are currently being used to regenerate periodontal tissues destroyed by periodontal disease and new studies suggest that they might have chondrogenic and osteogenic properties. These new functions of enamel proteins will be the focus of this review.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 1997

IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES BETWEEN AMELOGENIN AND TUFTELIN GENE PRODUCTS DURING TOOTH DEVELOPMENT

Thomas G.H. Diekwisch; Joy Ware; Alan G. Fincham; Margarita Zeichner-David

Amelogenins and tuftelins are highly specialized proteins secreted into the developing enamel matrix during mammalian enamel formation. Both tuftelins and amelogenins have been associated with various functions during nucleation and maturation of the developing enamel matrix. In this study we conducted experiments to investigate whether tuftelins and portions of the amelogenin molecule were deposited and processed in spatially distinguished portions of the developing enamel matrix, using antibodies specific against tuftelin or amelogenins. The amelogenin antibodies were raised against recombinant and native amelogenins and also included an antibody against a polypeptide encoded by amelogenin exon 4. To compare spatial expression patterns of enamel protein epitopes, 3-day postnatal mouse molar tooth organs were processed for paraffin histology and cut into serial sections. Adjacent sections were exposed to antibodies against either tuftelin or various amelogenin epitopes. To investigate age-related changes of enamel protein expression, amelogenin and tuftelin antibodies were applied to tooth organs of developmental stages E19 and 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 postnatal days. Tuftelin was detected within the odontoblast processes during earlier stages of development (E19 and 1 day postnatal), whereas during later stages (3–11 days) it was recognized in a portion of the enamel layer adjacent to the dentine–enamel junction. In contrast, all four antibodies against amelogenins reacted with parts of the ameloblast cytoplasm and the entire enamel layer. Using immunohistochemistry, we were not able to detect any differences in the spatial distribution of the four amelogenin epitopes investigated. The spatial differences in the distribution of amelogenin and tuftelin as observed in this study may be intepreted as an indication of functional differences between both proteins during early enamel biomineralization.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1998

Induced expression of MyoD, myogenin and desmin during myoblast differentiation in embryonic mouse tongue development

Akira Yamane; Katsu Takahashi; Mark Mayo; Hang Vo; Lillian Shum; Margarita Zeichner-David; Harold C. Slavkin

Significant progress has been made in defining mechanisms governing myogenesis at the transcriptional levels, but the extracellular signal-transduction pathways involved in myogenesis are not as yet defined. The developing mouse tongue provides a model for the regulation of myogenesis during precise time periods in embryogenesis. The molecular cues that regulate the close-range autocrine and/or paracrine signalling processes required for the fast-twitch complex tongue musculature are not known. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF alpha) controls myogenesis in embryonic mouse tongue through the induction of myogenic regulatory factors such as myoD, myf5, myogenin and MRF4/myf6/herculin. To test this hypothesis, the effects of exogenous TGF alpha on the transcription of myoD, myf5, myogenin, MRF4 and desmin were examined in tongue samples from embryonic day-10.5 mandibular explants cultured in serum-free, chemically defined medium and then processed for competitive, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. TGF alpha induced myoD, myogenin and desmin expression. Treatment with 20 and 40 ng/ml TGF alpha decreased or downregulated myf5 mRNA. MRF4 was not detected in the explants. TGF alpha apparently induces the early developmental stages of myogenesis through sequential upregulation of myoD and myogenin, downregulation of myf5 and corresponding significant increases in muscle-specific gene expression such as desmin transcription.


Journal of Periodontal Research | 2010

Human cementoblasts express enamel-associated molecules in vitro and in vivo

Javier Núñez; Mariano Sanz; Lia Hoz-Rodríguez; Margarita Zeichner-David; Higinio Arzate

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE Cementum is a mineralized tissue that facilitates the attachment of periodontal ligament to the root and surrounding alveolar bone and plays a key role in the regeneration of periodontal tissues. The molecular mechanisms that regulate the proliferation and differentiation of cementoblasts, however, have not been elucidated to date. Enamel molecules are believed to regulate cementoblast differentiation and to initiate the formation of acellular extrinsic fiber cementum. The purpose of this study was therefore to isolate and culture human root-derived cells (HRDC) in order to determine whether they are able to express both cementum and specific enamel proteins and subsequently to confirm these findings in vivo. MATERIAL AND METHODS Human root-derived cells were isolated and expanded in vitro. Cells were characterized using RT-PCR, immunostaining, western blotting and by examination of total mRNA to determine the expression of cementum and enamel markers. Human periodontal tissues were also examined for the expression of enamel-related proteins by immunostaining. RESULTS We showed that HRDC express mRNA corresponding to ameloblastin (AMBN), amelogenin (AMEL), enamelin (ENAM), tuftelin (TUFT) and cementum-associated molecules such as cementum protein 1 (CEMP1) and cementum attachment protein (CAP). Western blotting revealed that HRDC express both AMEL and AMBN gene products, as well as the cementum markers CEMP1 and CAP. In vivo, we have showed that AMBN and AMEL are expressed by cementoblasts lining cementum, paravascular cells and periodontal ligament cells. CONCLUSION These results suggest that enamel-associated and cementum-associated proteins could act synergistically in regulating cementoblast differentiation and cementum deposition and offer new approaches on how the cementogenesis process is regulated.


Connective Tissue Research | 1998

Induction of Amelogenin and Ameloblastin by Insulin and Insulin-like Growth Factors (IGF-I and IGF-II) during Embryonic Mouse Tooth Development In Vitro

Katsu Takahashi; Akira Yamane; Pablo Bringas; Javier Caton; Harold C. Slavkin; Margarita Zeichner-David

Insulin and insulin-like growth factors (IGF-I and IGF-II) are considered pleiotropic, acting as both mitogen and differentiation factors. Several investigators have demonstrated the expression of insulin, IGFs, their cognate receptors and IGF binding proteins during tooth morphogenesis. Previous work done in our laboratory indicated that exogenous insulin and IGFs induce the accumulation of enamel extracellular matrix on mouse mandibular molars cultured in a serumless, chemically defined medium. In order to determine the level of control of these factors in the induction of enamel biomineralization, we designed experiments to quantitate mRNAs for enamel specific-gene products. Mandibular first molars (MI) obtained from E15 Swiss Webster mice were placed in organ culture in the presence of insulin (1,000 ng/ml), IGF-I (100 ng/ml) or IGF-II (100 ng/ml) for 6, 12 and 18-days. At termination date, the RNA was extracted and the concentration of mRNAs for amelogenin, tuftelin and ameloblastin were determined using a quantitative competitive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technique (PCR mimic). Our results showed that after 6-days in culture; treatment with insulin, IGF-I and IGF-II increased the synthesis of amelogenin and ameloblastin. In contrast, the expression of tuftelin mRNA was not affected by either factor. In conclusion, our studies showed that the increase in enamel matrix formation by overexpression of IGFs is the result of transcriptional regulation of enamel specific proteins like amelogenin and ameloblastin but not tuftelin. These studies also suggest that the regulatory mechanisms controlling tuftelin gene expression are different than the mechanisms regulating ameloblastin and amelogenin transcription.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Characterization of recombinant human cementum protein 1 (hrCEMP1): Primary role in biomineralization

Eduardo Villarreal-Ramírez; Abel Moreno; Jaime Mas-Oliva; Juan Luis Chávez-Pacheco; A. Sampath Narayanan; Ivet Gil-Chavarría; Margarita Zeichner-David; Higinio Arzate

Cementum protein 1 (CEMP1) has been recently cloned, and in vitro experiments have shown functions as regulator of cementoblast behavior and inducer of differentiation of non-osteogenic cells toward a cementoblastic/osteoblastic phenotype. In this study, we have produced a full-length human recombinant CEMP1 protein in a human gingival fibroblast cell line. The purified protein (hrCEMP1) has a M(r) 50,000. Characterization of hrCEMP1 indicates that its secondary structure is mainly composed of beta-sheet (55%), where random coil and alpha helix conformations correspond to 35% and 10%, respectively. It was found that hrCEMP1 is N-glycosylated, phosphorylated and possesses strong affinity for hydroxyapatite. Even more important, our results show that hrCEMP1 plays a role during the biomineralization process by promoting octacalcium phosphate (OCP) crystal nucleation. These features make CEMP1 a very good candidate for biotechnological applications in order to achieve cementum and/or bone regeneration.

Collaboration


Dive into the Margarita Zeichner-David's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harold C. Slavkin

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Malcolm L. Snead

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan G. Fincham

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mary MacDougall

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Higinio Arzate

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pablo Bringas

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eduardo C. Lau

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Janet Moradian-Oldak

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Enrique Romo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge