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1.
Development of fetal rat intestine in organ and monolayer culture   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,100(5):1611-1622
Maturation and differentiation of intestinal epithelial cells was demonstrated in segments of fetal rat small intestine, maintained for more than a month in suspension organ culture, by ultrastructural, biochemical, and immunological criteria. Over a 5-7 d period, fragments of fetal intestine evolved into globular structures covered with a single columnar epithelium ultrastructurally similar to suckling villus cells. Loose mesenchymal cells, cellular debris, and collagen were present inside the structures. After 6 d in culture, goblet cells, not present in the fetal intestine at day 18, were numerous and well developed. Intestinal endocrine cells were also observed. Immunofluorescence studies employing monoclonal antibodies specific for villus and crypt cells in vivo, and various enzyme assays, have demonstrated a level of differentiation and maturation of the cultured epithelial cells similar but not identical to that of suckling intestinal mucosa in vivo. Crypts and crypt cell markers were not observed in the the cultures. Addition of glucocorticoids to the culture medium resulted in the induction of sucrase-isomaltase but failed to promote most of the functional changes characteristic of the intestinal epithelium at weaning in vivo. Epithelial cells were identified in explants derived from the organ cultures by their specific expression of intestinal cytokeratin. Differentiation-specific markers, present in the epithelial cells in primary cultures, were lost upon selection and subculturing of pure epithelial cell populations. These results suggest a requirement for mesenchymal and/or extracellular matrix components in the maintenance of the differentiated state of the epithelial cells. The fetal intestinal organ cultures described here present significant advantages over traditional organ and monolayer culture techniques for the study of the cellular and molecular interactions involved in the development and differentiation of the intestinal epithelium.  相似文献   

2.
Crypt cell development in newborn rat small intestine   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Three monoclonal antibodies were prepared against luminal membranes from small intestinal cells of 3-d-old rats (YBB 1/27, YBB 3/10) and crypt cell membranes from adult rats (CC 4/80). The antibodies were shown to define specific stages of development of the intestinal crypt cells. The YBB 1/27 antigen was first detected at the luminal membrane of the epithelial cells in fetal intestine at day 20 of gestation; it was confined to the crypt cells and lower villus cells between 1 and 20-22 d after birth, and could not be detected in any region of the intestine in older animals. The YBB 3/10 antigen, identified as a set of high Mr proteins, was localized over the entire surface membrane of fetal intestinal cells and of crypt and villus cells after birth; after weaning (20-22 d after birth) it gradually disappeared from the villus cells and became confined to the region of the crypts. The CC 4/80 antigen, identified as a protein (or a set of related proteins) of molecular mass 28-34 kD, was shown to appear in the crypt cells 10-14 d after birth. Its distribution changed after weaning, when it disappeared from the crypts, and was localized in the absorptive lower villus cells. This change in pattern could, in part, be prematurely elicited by cortisone injection in younger animals. These results have demonstrated the presence of specific surface membrane components on the intestinal crypt cells, and suggested that fetal antigens may be retained in these cells after birth.  相似文献   

3.
Alterations in lipids linked to intestinal maturation and enterocyte differentiation were reviewed. The 3 main lipid components of cell membranes, ie cholesterol, phospholipids and glycolipids, were examined. Cell phospholipid content increases from the crypts to the mid-villus, which accounts for membrane development and organelle growth in differentiating cells. Changes in the proportion of phospholipid polar head groups occur in brush border membrane during postnatal maturation of the small intestine. The possibility that phospholipid fatty acid composition in differentiating cells might be altered by dietary lipids is discussed. Cholesterol biosynthesis mainly occurs in crypt and lower villus cells whereas its absorption from luminal content and esterification into lipoproteins occur in upper villus mature cells. Cholesterol cell content increases in mature cells in comparison to immature cells on the one hand, and in the distal by comparison with proximal parts of the intestine on the other. Increasing cholesterol content is generally correlated with decreasing membrane fluidity, which in turn could modulate functional properties of the mucosa. Glycosphingolipids are mainly found in the brush border membrane, which contains 20-30% glycolipids by weight of total lipids. These components tend to reinforce the membrane stability and significantly contribute to the surface properties of epithelial cells. The latter undergo noticeable changes during cell differentiation and postnatal maturation. Significant changes in both the glycosidic and lipophilic parts of glycosphingolipid molecules occur in differentiating cells and are of possible importance in the process of mucosal maturation. It is possible that the addition of a terminal sialic acid (sialyltransferase activity) instead of a terminal galactose (galactosyltransferase) to an endogenous acceptor (lactosylceramide) could constitute an important event in the differentiation process, and may account for the increasing content of hematosides along the intestinal villus of rat. Alterations in lipid counterpart mainly consist of hydroxylation of fatty acids in hematosides during postnatal maturation or in glucosylceramides during cell differentiation. Collectively these intestinal lipid changes may contribute in part to the development of mucosal barrier, selective permeability and functional properties of the mature intestinal mucosa.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Post-embedding lectin-gold cytochemistry was employed to investigate the distribution of sialic acid and fucose residues in rat small intestinal epithelial cells during postnatal development. During the suckling phase (postnatal day 1) the apical and basolateral plasma membranes of epithelial cells, as well as the goblet cell mucus was intensely stained with the sialic acid-specific Sambucus nigra L. lectin I-gold complex (SNL I-g). By the weaning period (postnatal day 23), the entire villus contained both SNL I-g-positive and negative cells. In adult small intestine, the plasma membranes of all epithelial cells were unreactive with SNL I-g; however, abundant staining was detectable in goblet cell mucus, cells of the lamina propria, and smooth muscle cells. The distribution of fucose residues as detected with a Ulex europaeus lectin I-gold complex (UEL I-g) was virtually opposite that of sialic acid. At postnatal day 1, staining was restricted to goblet cell mucus, whereas by postnatal day 23, a portion of epithelial cells displayed UEL I-g binding sites along the apical and basolateral plasma membranes. In the adult, the apical and basolateral plasma membranes of all epithelial cells, as well as goblet cell mucus were stained with UEL I-g. These results support biochemical data demonstrating a shift from sialylation to fucosylation of intestinal microvillar glycoconjugates during the weaning phase of postnatal development. Moreover, the results indicate that rather than a general decrease in cellular sialylation, specific individual cells at all positions along the crypt-to-villus axis become devoid of sialic acid.  相似文献   

6.
Here we describe a monoclonal antibody (MMC4) that recognizes a novel antigen on the apical surface of rat alveolar epithelial type II and Clara cells in the lung, proximal tubule epithelial cells in the kidney, and villus epithelial cells in the small intestine. Biochemical analysis showed that the MMC4 antigen was sensitive to heating and proteinase K digestion and that it is distributed in the detergent-rich phase after Triton X-114 phase separation. These data suggest that the MMC4 antigen is an integral membrane protein. Glycerol gradient sedimentation identified two forms of the MMC4 antigen: one with a sedimentation coefficient of 10.1 and one with a sedimentation coefficient of 1.66, suggesting that the antigen may be part of a multiprotein complex. During rat development (fetal day 16 to adult), the MMC4 antigen increased 12-fold in the lung and 200-fold in the kidney. In the intestine, the MMC4 antigen increased 150-fold by neonatal day 1 and then decreased to adult values. Our data demonstrate that the MMC4 antigen is unlike known type II cell- and Clara cell-associated proteins. The MMC4 monoclonal antibody will be useful as a marker of epithelial cell phenotype in development and injury studies.  相似文献   

7.
We have previously studied the immunohistological localization of the three adhesion molecules L1, N-CAM and J1/tenascin in adult mouse small intestine and shown that L1 expression in epithelial crypt cells underlies the adhesion of these cells to one another [63]. To obtain further insight into the functional roles of L1, N-CAM and J1/tenascin in this organ we studied their expression starting at embryonic day 14 during embryonic and early postnatal morphogenesis and during epithelial cell migration in the adult. Expression of L1 was restricted to neural cells until approximately postnatal day 5, when L1 started to be detectable on crypt but not on villus cells, predominantly on the basolateral membrane infoldings. As in brain, L1-specific mRNA was approximately 6 kb in size. L1 from intestine appears to differ from the brain-derived equivalent in possessing a higher level of glycosylation. N-CAM was detectable from embryonic day 14 onward in neural and also in mesenchymal cells. Expression by smooth muscle cells decreased during development. In the villus core, N-CAM was strongly detectable at contact sites between smooth muscle cells forming the cellular scaffold of the villus. From embryonic day 14 onward, N-CAM appeared in both 180- and 140-kDa forms. J1/tenascin was present in both neural and mesenchymal cells from embryonic day 14 onward. Starting at embryonic day 17, J1/tenascin appeared concentrated at the boundary between mesenchyme and epithelium in an increasing gradient from the crypt base to the villus top. From embryonic day 14 onward J1/tenascin consisted of the 190- and 220-kDa components. J1/tenascin from intestine differed from brain-derived J1 in its carbohydrate composition. These observations show that the three adhesion molecules are expressed by distinct cell populations and may serve as cell-type-specific markers in pathologically altered intestinal tissue.  相似文献   

8.
Alterations in sialic acid and fucose contents of different populations of epithelial cells have been studied in suckling and adult rat intestine. The progression of cells from crypt base to villus tip is associated with an increase in sialic acid and a decrease in fucose levels of the cells in adult rats. In suckling pups, sialic acid is uniformly distributed along the length of villi, and fucose is richly (P less than 0.01) present in cryptic cells compared to that at the villus tip. Adult-type changes in sialylation and fucosylation of enterocytes across the crypt-villus axis were precociously produced by cortisone administration to suckling pups. Thyroxine treatment was less effective in influencing the glycosylation process in rat intestine.  相似文献   

9.
Mosaic analysis using the spf(ash)-heterozygous female mouse was performed to clarify the cell lineage and cell behavior during small intestinal development with special attention given to the villus and crypt formation. The spf(ash) mutation, located on the X-chromosome, causes ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, which leads to mosaic expression of this enzyme in the small intestine of the heterozygous female mouse. In the small intestine in heterozygous fetuses, very small patches, which were aggregates of OTC-positive cells or negative cells, with no definite orientation to the villus structures were observed. In the neonatal small intestine, the intervillus region (the presumptive crypts) was polyclonal, and the majority of crypts were comprised exclusively cells of either genotype in 2-week-old small intestine. These results suggest that extensive migration and cell mixing of small intestinal epithelial cells, which have no definite correlation with the villus formation, occur in fetal stages of development, and that the crypt morphogenesis commences after birth independently of the monoclonality of the epithelial cells. Our data with the mosaic mice also reconfirmed the monoclonality of the adult small intestinal crypts demonstrated in mouse aggregation chimeras.  相似文献   

10.
In the adult vertebrate intestine, multi-potent stem cells continuously generate all of the epithelial cells throughout the adulthood. While it has long been known that the frog intestine is formed via the development of adult intestinal stem cells during thyroid hormone (TH)-dependent metamorphosis, the basic structure of the adult intestine is formed by birth in mammals and it is unclear if the subsequent maturation of the intestine involves any changes in the intestinal stem cells. Two recent papers showing that B lymphocyte-induced maturation protein 1 (Blimp1) regulates postnatal epithelial stem cell reprogramming during mouse intestinal maturation support the model that adult intestinal stem cells are developed during postembryonic development in mammals, in a TH-dependent process similar to intestinal remodeling during amphibian metamorphosis. Since the formation of the adult intestine in both mammals and amphibians is closely associated with the adaptation from aquatic to terrestrial life during the peak of endogenous TH levels, the molecular mechanisms by which the adult stem cells are developed are likely evolutionally conserved.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Postnatal enlargement of the mammalian intestine comprises cylindrical and luminal growth, associated with crypt fission and crypt/villus hyperplasia, respectively, which subsequently predominate before and after weaning. The bipartite adhesion G protein–coupled receptor CD97 shows an expression gradient along the crypt–villus axis in the normal human intestine. We here report that transgenic mice overexpressing CD97 in intestinal epithelial cells develop an upper megaintestine. Intestinal enlargement involves an increase in length and diameter but does not affect microscopic morphology, as typical for cylindrical growth. The megaintestine is acquired after birth and before weaning, independent of the genotype of the mother, excluding altered availability of milk constituents as driving factor. CD97 overexpression does not regulate intestinal growth factors, stem cell markers, and Wnt signaling, which contribute to epithelial differentiation and renewal, nor does it affect suckling-to-weaning transition. Consistent with augmented cylindrical growth, suckling but not adult transgenic mice show enlarged crypts and thus more crypt fissions caused by a transient increase of the crypt transit-amplifying zone. Intestinal enlargement by CD97 requires its seven-span transmembrane/cytoplasmic C-terminal fragment but not the N-terminal fragment binding partner CD55. In summary, ectopic expression of CD97 in intestinal epithelial cells provides a unique model for intestinal cylindrical growth occurring in breast-fed infants.  相似文献   

13.
14.
A monoclonal antibody identifying an antigen expressed by rat type II alveolar epithelial cells, but not by type I epithelial cells or other mature lung cells, was produced by immunization of mice with cells of the rat L2 cell line. The antigen recognized by the antibody was present on the microvillous luminal surface of type II epithelial cells. In adult rat lung, only type II epithelial cells bound the antibody. During fetal development the antigen was expressed by cuboidal epithelial cells lining the respiratory ducts of the first divisions of the tracheal bud, but not by epithelial cells lining the esophagus or trachea. The antigen continued to be expressed by cuboidal epithelial cells lining the larger respiratory ducts until approximately 19 days gestational age. Thereafter, expression was increasingly limited to selected single cells or clusters of two to four cuboidal cells in the smallest ducts. By the 21st postnatal day, the antigen was expressed only by type II alveolar epithelial cells. Type II alveolar epithelial cells isolated from adult lung and the L2 cell line in culture expressed the antigen on the cell surface. A protein of approximately 146,000 Mr was isolated by immunoadsorption of the antigen from non-ionic detergent extracts of type II cells and L2 cells. Preliminary studies of the binding of the antibody to other rat tissues indicate that the antibody binds to renal proximal tubular epithelial cells of the kidney and the luminal surface of the small bowel epithelial cells.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Isolated hamster intestinal epithelial cells can be separated by velocity sedimentationion on 2–10% Ficoll gradients into three subpopulations of cells which differ in morphology, biochemistry, physiology, and membrane components. These subpopulations are not pure but are enriched in a single cell type to the extent that differences in cell function can be observed. The proliferative crypt cells are separated from the digestive-absorptive villus cells. A third subpopulation with a distinctive morphology is also obtained. Quantitation of DNA recoveries from the gradients indicates that this population constitutes approximately one-third of the epithelial cell population. These carrot-shaped cells are found adjacent to the digestive-absorptive columnar epithelial cells on the villus. The two types of villus cells differ in glycolipid or glycoprotein components of the brush border as shown by lectin binding experiments with the isolated cells. The gradient data also suggest that only one-third of the intestinal epithelial cell population is responsible for most monosaccharide absorption in hamster small intestine.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Membrane surface properties of rat intestinal epithelial cells (crypt base to villus tips) were studied by cell partition in a two-polymer aqueous phase system. A higher partition generally reflects higher cell surface charge (or charge-associated properties) which is not necessarily the same as the charge determined by cell electrophoresis since the latter reflects only the charge at the plane of shear while the former gauges it deeper into the membrane [10]. Cells were prepared by the method of Weiser [22] which sequentially yields cell fractions from villus tips to crypt base. The isolated cells were subjected to countercurrent distribution in a dextran-polyethylene glycol aqueous two-phase system. Countercurrent distribution on the first fractions obtained by Weiser's method have a peak to the left and a smaller peak to the right indicating a surface membrane heterogeneity of upper villus cells; last fractions have a peak only to the right. When all fractions are pooled before countercurrent distribution two well-separated peaks are obtained with the right peak sometimes showing additional heterogeneities. Experiments combining isotope labeling of cells with countercurrent distribution lead us to conclude that the membrane charge (or charge-associated properties) of crypt base cells increases during differentiation and that the charge of the villus cells to which they give rise then diminishes during maturation. The charge of the bulk of the upper villus cells is the lowest of any in the intestinal cell population. The basis for the alteration in charge has not been established but the phenomenon of changing membrane surface charge (or charge-associated properties) as a function of cell differentiation, maturation and aging appears to be a general phenomenon having been found and traced in different cell populations [14, 16, 17, 28].  相似文献   

19.
Summary The intestinal disaccharidases, lactase, sucrase-isomaltase complex, and glucoamylase are proteins intimately associated with the brush-border membrane of the epithelial cell. These three enzyme activities are found in the intestine of the adult rat; lactase and glucoamylase activities are primarily associated with the intestine of the infant rat. Only glucoamylase and isomaltase activities are detected in the intestine of the California sea lion, Zalophus californianus. The activities of these enzymes are detected only in villus cells, and not in crypt cells.We have carried out electron microscopic studies of negatively stained brush-border preparations of intestinal crypt and villus cells; from the intestine of the 10-day-old rat and from that of the California sea lion. The density of the knob-like structures protruding from the brush-border membranes was not significantly different in any of these preparations. The diameter of the knobs on the preparations from crypt cells was smaller than the diameters of the knobs found on membranes prepared from the other sources. These data are discussed in terms of the relationship between the presence of knob structures and disaccharidase activities associated with the brush-border membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Disabled-2 (Dab2) is an intracellular adaptor protein proposed to function in endocytosis. Here, we investigate the intestinal and renal Dab2 expression versus maturation. Dab2 mRNA levels measured by RT-PCR are greater in the small than in the large intestine. Immunological studies localize Dab2 to the terminal web domain of the enterocytes and reveal the presence of a 96-kDa Dab2 isoform in the apical membrane of the jejunum, ileum, and renal cortex of the suckling and adult rat. A 69-kDa Dab2 isoform is only observed in the apical membranes of the suckling ileum. During the suckling period, the Dab2 mRNA levels measured in the enterocytes and crypts and those of the 96-kDa Dab2 isoform are greater in the ileum than in the jejunum. No segmental differences are observed in the adult intestine. In the intestine, the levels of Dab2 mRNA and those of the 96-kDa Dab2 isoform decrease to adult values at weaning, whereas in the kidney they increase with development. Weaning the pups on a commercial milk diet slows the periweaning decline in the levels of Dab2 mRNA in the crypts and of those of the 96-kDa isoform. This is the first report showing that the 96-kDa Dab2 isoform is expressed at the apical domain of rat small intestine, that ontogeny regulates Dab2 gene expression in intestine and kidney and that retarding weaning affects intestinal Dab2 gene expression.  相似文献   

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