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PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS

Proliferation of Paneth and goblet cells of mouse duodenal crypts was studied by high resolution light microscope radioautography. In one group of mice, blood levels of thymidine-(3)H were sustained for up to 12 hr by repeated injections of isotope to facilitate identification of proliferating cells...

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Autores principales: Troughton, W. David, Trier, Jerry S.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1969
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107723/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5775788
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author Troughton, W. David
Trier, Jerry S.
author_facet Troughton, W. David
Trier, Jerry S.
author_sort Troughton, W. David
collection PubMed
description Proliferation of Paneth and goblet cells of mouse duodenal crypts was studied by high resolution light microscope radioautography. In one group of mice, blood levels of thymidine-(3)H were sustained for up to 12 hr by repeated injections of isotope to facilitate identification of proliferating cells. In these animals, many goblet cell nuclei incorporated thymidine-(3)H whereas only 1 of 6261 tabulated Paneth cells was labeled. Cells intermediate in structure between undifferentiated and goblet cells and between undifferentiated and Paneth cells were identified and their light and electron microscopic features are described. A significant number of these "intermediate" cells incorporated thymidine-(3)H into their nuclei. Another group of mice received a single injection of thymidine-(3)H. These animals were killed 4 hr to 29 days after isotope administration. Goblet cells and intermediate cells with labeled nuclei were identified 4 hr after thymidine-(3)H but could not be seen after 15 days. In contrast, Paneth cells with labeled nuclei were not observed until 24 hr after thymidine-(3)H but were still present at 29 days, long after labeled undifferentiated, goblet, and intermediate cells had disappeared. We conclude that differentiated Paneth cells in mouse duodenum do not normally proliferate, but, instead, arise by differentiation from undifferentiated crypt cells or from intermediate cells. Moreover, once formed, Paneth cells persist in crypts for a prolonged period. In contrast, intermediate cells and crypt goblet cells proliferate actively and are less stable cell populations than differentiated Paneth cells. The precise function of the intermediate cells is not known, but they may represent transition forms between undifferentiated cells and the more matrure secretory cells. Damage of crypt epithelial cells, thought to be due to radiation effects, was evident in both groups of mice.
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spelling pubmed-21077232008-05-01 PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS Troughton, W. David Trier, Jerry S. J Cell Biol Article Proliferation of Paneth and goblet cells of mouse duodenal crypts was studied by high resolution light microscope radioautography. In one group of mice, blood levels of thymidine-(3)H were sustained for up to 12 hr by repeated injections of isotope to facilitate identification of proliferating cells. In these animals, many goblet cell nuclei incorporated thymidine-(3)H whereas only 1 of 6261 tabulated Paneth cells was labeled. Cells intermediate in structure between undifferentiated and goblet cells and between undifferentiated and Paneth cells were identified and their light and electron microscopic features are described. A significant number of these "intermediate" cells incorporated thymidine-(3)H into their nuclei. Another group of mice received a single injection of thymidine-(3)H. These animals were killed 4 hr to 29 days after isotope administration. Goblet cells and intermediate cells with labeled nuclei were identified 4 hr after thymidine-(3)H but could not be seen after 15 days. In contrast, Paneth cells with labeled nuclei were not observed until 24 hr after thymidine-(3)H but were still present at 29 days, long after labeled undifferentiated, goblet, and intermediate cells had disappeared. We conclude that differentiated Paneth cells in mouse duodenum do not normally proliferate, but, instead, arise by differentiation from undifferentiated crypt cells or from intermediate cells. Moreover, once formed, Paneth cells persist in crypts for a prolonged period. In contrast, intermediate cells and crypt goblet cells proliferate actively and are less stable cell populations than differentiated Paneth cells. The precise function of the intermediate cells is not known, but they may represent transition forms between undifferentiated cells and the more matrure secretory cells. Damage of crypt epithelial cells, thought to be due to radiation effects, was evident in both groups of mice. The Rockefeller University Press 1969-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2107723/ /pubmed/5775788 Text en Copyright © 1969 by The Rockefeller University Press. This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Troughton, W. David
Trier, Jerry S.
PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS
title PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS
title_full PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS
title_fullStr PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS
title_full_unstemmed PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS
title_short PANETH AND GOBLET CELL RENEWAL IN MOUSE DUODENAL CRYPTS
title_sort paneth and goblet cell renewal in mouse duodenal crypts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107723/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5775788
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