May 22, 2001
                              SAN ANTONIO (San Antonio Express-News) - 
                              Squirreled away down a labyrinth of hallways at 
                              the University of Texas Health Science Center, 
                              Mary MacDougall presides over a crowded and busy 
                              laboratory, making big plans for the Tooth Fairy. 
                              
                              Twenty years from now, if this dental 
                              researcher has her way, the mythical sprite will 
                              be more than just a figure of childlike 
                              imaginations making stealth visits to 7-year-olds 
                              who have parted with baby cuspids and incisors. 
                              
                              She will walk around in broad daylight, wearing 
                              a lab coat and employing gene therapy to grow new 
                              teeth for 50-year-olds who have lost their 
                              original choppers to periodontal disease, decay or 
                              trauma. 
                              That sounds far-fetched, but MacDougall and 
                              other prominent dental researchers say it is a 
                              very possible future for dentistry, as the Human 
                              Genome Project bears fruit in the coming decades. 
                              
                              Someday, MacDougall said, dentures and fillings 
                              will be forever banished to the museums. Dentists 
                              will know how to turn on long-dormant genes and 
                              prompt patients to fix their own cavities or grow 
                              their own replacement teeth. 
                              "It sounds like science fiction," said 
                              MacDougall, associate dean of the dental school at 
                              the health science center. "But it's something 
                              that can be done eventually." 
                              MacDougall has taken steps toward accomplishing 
                              that task in animals. Researchers in her lab have 
                              taken root buds from laboratory mice and 
                              successfully grown mice molars in a culture dish. 
                              The roots, crown and finishing enamel are 
                              assembled into perfectly formed teeth not much 
                              bigger than a pinhead. 
                              Humans are far more complicated, though. First, 
                              researchers must find the genes responsible for 
                              building the 25 major proteins that make up a 
                              tooth. Then, there may be dozens of other genes 
                              involved in telling the body when and how and 
                              where to build a particular tooth. 
                              Other prominent dental researchers are watching 
                              the ongoing work with interest. 
                              "There's a lot of hurdles there, but I wouldn't 
                              say anything isn't doable," said Frederick 
                              Eichmiller, director of the American Dental 
                              Association's Paffenbarger Research Center in 
                              Gaithersburg, Md. 
                              "It's an enormously complex process," 
                              Eichmiller said. "You'll have to have all the 
                              genes that generate that one tooth, so you get a 
                              tooth that will match all the characteristics of 
                              the one that was lost. If you lose a front tooth, 
                              you want a front tooth back." 
                              Progress will come in increments, beginning 
                              with development of fillings and crowns that more 
                              closely resemble real human teeth. Scientists in 
                              MacDougall's laboratory already have undertaken 
                              this first piece of the puzzle, and believe that 
                              they will have new products on the market within 
                              five years. 
                              Beyond that, researchers hope to be able to 
                              grow laboratory teeth that can be implanted in a 
                              human mouth. These would not be living teeth with 
                              nerves and blood vessels, but they would be made 
                              of the same materials as human teeth. 
                              The final step will come perhaps 20 years from 
                              now, MacDougall said, when a dentist's arsenal 
                              will include treatments that cause teeth to repair 
                              themselves. 
                              "I tell my students, one of the wonderful 
                              things about science is, when you answer one 
                              question, you get five new questions. You never 
                              run out of things to investigate," MacDougall 
                              said. 
                              Unlike skin, bone and muscle cells, the cells 
                              in human teeth do not replenish themselves. 
                              Teeth form twice during our lives. Twenty 
                              primary or "baby" teeth erupt in stages between 
                              the ages of 8 months and 3 years. Those are 
                              displaced by 32 permanent adult teeth between ages 
                              6 and 17. 
                              Then the teeth-forming genes go silent for the 
                              duration of human lives. Still, they remain in the 
                              nucleus of every cell, part of the 6-foot-long 
                              ringlet of DNA that make up the 23 chromosomes. 
                              
                              The recently completed genome project has 
                              sequenced the chemical code along each of the 
                              chromosomes. Scientists now are investigating 
                              precisely where the estimated 30,000 genes are, 
                              and what each gene is programmed to do. 
                              Researchers have found some of the major genes 
                              involved in tooth formation, but have quite a way 
                              to go, MacDougall said. 
                              "There may be as many as 10 percent of the 
                              total genes that are somehow involved in the 
                              formation of teeth," she said. 
                              The biggest search is for key regulator genes; 
                              the ones that tell the body when to form a tooth, 
                              where in the mouth it should erupt and whether it 
                              should be a molar or an incisor. Once these are 
                              found, MacDougall said, scientists will be on 
                              their way to knowing how to generate new teeth. 
                              
                              The San Antonio Express-News.