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1.
Summary The organization of collagen fibrils in the rat sciatic nerve was studied by scanning electron microscopy after digestion of cellular elements by sodium hydroxide treatment, and by conventional transmission electron microscopy. The epineurium consisted mainly of thick bundles of collagen fibrils measuring about 10–20 m in width; they were wavy and ran slightly obliquely to the nerve axis. Between these collagen bundles, a very coarse meshwork of randomly oriented collagen fibrils was present. In the perineurium, collagen fibrils occupied the interspaces between the concentrically arranged perineurial cells; in each interspace, they formed a sheet of characteristic lacework elaborately interwoven by thin (about 3 m or less in width) bundles of collagen fibrils. In the subperineurial region, there was a distinct sheet of densely woven collagen fibrils between the perineurium and underlying endoneurial fibroblasts. In the endoneurium, collagen fibrils surrounded individual nerve fibers in two layers as scaffolds: the inner layer was made up of a delicate meshwork of very fine collagen fibrils, and the outer one consisted of longitudinally oriented bundles of about 1–3 m in width. The collagen fibril arrangement described above may protect the nerve fibers against external forces.  相似文献   

2.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) is a membrane glycoprotein involved in neuron-neuron and neuron-muscle adhesion. It can be synthesized in various forms by both nerve and muscle and it becomes concentrated at the motor endplate. Biochemical analysis of a frog muscle extract enriched in basal lamina revealed the presence of a polydisperse, polysialylated form of N-CAM with an average Mr of approximately 160,000 as determined by SDS-PAGE, which was converted to a form of 125,000 Mr by treatment with neuraminidase. To define further the role of N-CAM in neuromuscular junction organization, we studied the distribution of N-CAM in an in vivo preparation of frog basal lamina sheaths obtained by inducing the degeneration of both nerve and muscle fibers. Immunoreactive material could be readily detected by anti-N-CAM antibodies in such basal lamina sheaths. Ultrastructural analysis using immunogold techniques revealed N-CAM in close association with the basal lamina sheaths, present in dense accumulation at places that presumably correspond to synaptic regions. N-CAM epitopes were also associated with collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix. The ability of anti-N-CAM antibodies to perturb nerve regeneration and reinnervation of the remaining basal lamina sheaths was then examined. In control animals, myelinating Schwann cells wrapped around the regenerated axon and reinnervation occurred only at the old synaptic areas; new contacts between nerve and basal lamina had a terminal Schwann cell capping the nerve terminal. In the presence of anti-N-CAM antibodies, three major abnormalities were observed in the regeneration and reinnervation processes: (a) regenerated axons in nerve trunks that had grown back into the old Schwann cell basal lamina were rarely associated with myelinating Schwann cell processes, (b) ectopic synapses were often present, and (c) many of the axon terminals lacked a terminal Schwann cell capping the nerve-basal lamina contact area. These results suggest that N-CAM may play an important role not only in the determination of synaptic areas but also in Schwann cell-axon interactions during nerve regeneration.  相似文献   

3.
Electron micrographs of transversely sectioned sciatic nerves removed from newborn, 3-day-old, and 7-day-old rats were used to make montages of comparable areas in the marginal bundle of the posterior tibial fascicle. At each age, the number of axons, their diameter, their relationships with Schwann cell processes, and their degree of myelination were determined. Also, three-dimensional reconstructions of representative fiber groups in the newborn nerve were made from similar montages at 5 additional transverse levels. The results showed that outgrowth of axons and migration of Schwann cells continued after birth. Families of Schwann cells, each surrounded by a common basal lamina, formed the sheaths that subdivided the bundles. Axons to be myelinated appeared to progress radially from a bundle to a 1 : 1 relationship with a Schwann cell at the sheath's outer margin. Sheaths containing multiple Schwann cells became smaller and more numerous as axon bundles were subdivided. Almost all of the isolated Schwann cells, which were separated from their neighbors by collagen were myelinating single large axons.  相似文献   

4.
Electron Microscopic Observations of the Carotid Body of the Cat   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Carotid bodies were removed from cats, fixed in buffered 1 per cent osmic acid, embedded in deaerated, nitrogenated methacrylate, and cut into thin sections for electron microscopic study. The carotid body is seen to be composed of islands of chemoreceptor and sustentacular cells surrounded by wide irregular sinusoids. These cells are separated from the sinusoids by relatively broad interstitial spaces which are filled with collagen, fibroblasts, and many unmyelinated nerve fibers with their Schwann cell sheaths. The chemoreceptor cells are surrounded by the flattened, multiprocessed sustentacular cells which serve to convey the axons from an interstitial to a pericellular location. These sustentacular cells are assumed to be lemmoblastic in origin. Relatively few axons are seen to abut on the chemoreceptor cells. The cytoplasm of the chemoreceptor cell is characterized by numerous small mitochondria, units of granular endoplasmic reticulum, a small Golgi complex, and a variety of vesicles. There are many small vesicles diffusely scattered throughout the cytoplasm. In addition, there is a small number of dark-cored vesicles of the type which has been previously described in the adrenal medulla. These are usually associated with the Golgi complex. These findings are discussed in relation to the concepts of the origin of the chemoreceptor cell and the nature of the synapse.  相似文献   

5.
In peripheral nerves, Schwann cells form the myelin sheath that insulates axons and allows rapid propagation of action potentials. Although a number of regulators of Schwann cell development are known, the signaling pathways that control myelination are incompletely understood. In this study, we show that Gpr126 is essential for myelination and other aspects of peripheral nerve development in mammals. A mutation in Gpr126 causes a severe congenital hypomyelinating peripheral neuropathy in mice, and expression of differentiated Schwann cell markers, including Pou3f1, Egr2, myelin protein zero and myelin basic protein, is reduced. Ultrastructural studies of Gpr126-/- mice showed that axonal sorting by Schwann cells is delayed, Remak bundles (non-myelinating Schwann cells associated with small caliber axons) are not observed, and Schwann cells are ultimately arrested at the promyelinating stage. Additionally, ectopic perineurial fibroblasts form aberrant fascicles throughout the endoneurium of the mutant sciatic nerve. This analysis shows that Gpr126 is required for Schwann cell myelination in mammals, and defines new roles for Gpr126 in axonal sorting, formation of mature non-myelinating Schwann cells and organization of the perineurium.  相似文献   

6.
Explants of fetal rat sensory ganglia, cultured under conditions allowing axon and Schwann cell outgrowth in the absence of fibroblasts, occasionally develop nerve fascicles that are partially suspended in culture medium above the collagen substrate. In these suspended regions, fascicles are abnormal in that Schwann cells are decreased in number, are confined to occasional clusters along the fascicle, provide ensheathment for only a few axons at the fascicle periphery, and do not form myelin. When these fascicles are presented with a substrate of reconstituted rat-tail collagen, Schwann cell numbers increase, ensheathment of small nerve fibers occurs normally, and larger axons are myelinated. We conclude that, for normal development, Schwann cells require contact with extracellular matrix as well as axons. The Schwann cell abnormalities in suspended fascicles are similar to those observed in nerve roots of dystrophic mice.  相似文献   

7.
The availability of cultures of normal cells (NCs) and Schwann cells (SCs) with and without fibroblasts has allowed us to investigate the sources of endoneurial and perineurial constituents of peripheral nerve. NCs cultured alone, devoid of ensheathment but healthy in appearance, lack basal lamina and extracellular fibrils. In contrast, when SCs accompany NCs, basal lamina and extracellular fibrils are consistently visible around SCs in outgrowth areas formed de novo in culture. These fibrils average 18 nm in diameter, exhibit a repeating banding pattern, and are trypsin-resistant and collagenase-sensitive. Collagen synthesis is also indicated by the incorporation of [14C]proline into peptide-bound hydroxy-proline in NC + SC or SC cultures. That the [14C]hydroxyproline polypeptides formed in NC + SC cultures are collagenous was determined in part by pepsin digestion- ammonium sulfate precipitation-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis techniques; the 14C-polypeptides migrate to the positions of alpha 1 (I), alpha 2, alpha 1 (III), and alpha B chains of type I, type III, and A-B collagens. Also formed are thin, ruthenium red-preserved strands interconnecting basal laminae. SC ensheathment of axons is similar to that found in the animal; one SC is related to a number of unmyelinated axons or a single myelinated axon. This proclivity to ensheathe and myelinate axons indicates that SC function is not lost during the preparative procedures or after lengthy isolation in culture and provides the most reliable means for SC identification. Perineurial ensheathment and macrophages are lacking in NC + SC culture preparations divested of fibroblasts. We conclude that SCs do not form perineurium or the larger diameter collagen fibrils typical of endoneurium but that in combination with neurons they generate biochemically detectable collagens and morphologically visible basal lamina and thin collagenous fibrils.  相似文献   

8.
Monospecific antibodies were prepared to a previously characterized chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan of brain and used in conjunction with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique to localize the proteoglycan by immunoelectron microscopy. The proteoglycan was found to be exclusively intracellular in adult cerebellum, cerebrum, brain stem, and spinal cord. Some neurons and astrocytes (including Golgi epithelial cells and Bergmann fibers) showed strong cytoplasmic staining. Although in the central nervous system there was heavy axoplasmic staining of many myelinated and unmyelinated fibers, not all axons stained. Staining was also seen in retinal neurons and glia (ganglion cells, horizontal cells, and Muller cells), but several central nervous tissue elements were consistently unstained, including Purkinje cells, oligodendrocytes, myelin, optic nerve axons, nerve endings, and synaptic vesicles. In sympathetic ganglion and peripheral nerve there was no staining of neuronal cell bodies, axons, myelin, or Schwann cells, but in sciatic nerve the Schwann cell basal lamina was stained, as was the extracellular matrix surrounding collagen fibrils. Staining was also observed in connective tissue surrounding the trachea and in the lacunae of tracheal hyaline cartilage. These findings are consistent with immunochemical studies demonstrating that antibodies to the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan of brain also cross-react to various degrees with certain connective tissue proteoglycans.  相似文献   

9.
Ultrastructural changes in the intestinal connective tissue of Xenopus laevis during metamorphosis have been studied. Throughout the larval period to stage 60, the connective tissue consists of a few immature fibroblasts surrounded by a sparse extracellular matrix: few collagen fibrils are visible except close to the thin basal lamina. At the beginning of the transition from larval to adult epithelial form around stage 60, extensive changes are observed in connective tissue. The cells become more numerous and different types appear as the collagen fibrils increase in number and density. Through gaps in the thickened and extensively folded basal lamina, frequent contacts between epithelial and connective tissue cells are established. Thereafter, with the progression of fold formation, the connective tissue cells become oriented according to their position relative to the fold structure. The basal lamina beneath the adult epithelium becomes thin after stage 62, while that beneath the larval epithelium remains thick. Upon the completion of metamorphosis, the connective tissue consists mainly of typical fibroblasts with definite orientation and numerous collagen fibrils. These observations indicate that developmental changes in the connective tissue, especially in the region close to the epithelium, are closely related spatiotemporarily to the transition from the larval to the adult epithelial form. This suggests that tissue interactions between the connective tissue and the epithelium play important roles in controlling the epithelial degeneration, proliferation, and differentiation during metamorphic climax.  相似文献   

10.
Schwann cell extracellular matrix molecules and their receptors   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The major cellular constituents of the mammalian peripheral nervous system are neurons (axons) and Schwann cells. During peripheral nerve development Schwann cells actively deposit extracellular matrix (ECM), comprised of basal lamina sheets that surround individual axon-Schwann cell units and collagen fibrils. These ECM structures are formed from a diverse set of macromolecules, consisting of glyco-proteins, collagens and proteoglycans. To interact with ECM, Schwann cells express a number of integrin and non-integrin cell surface receptors. The expression of many Schwann cell ECM proteins and their receptors is developmentally regulated and, in some cases, dependent on axonal contact. Schwann cell ECM acts as an organizer of peripheral nerve tissue and strongly influences Schwann cell adhesion, growth and differentiation and regulates axonal growth during development and regeneration.  相似文献   

11.
Electron micrographs from serial cross-sections of 12-day-old mouse forelegs were digitized and three-dimensional reconstruction of the data was carried out on an Apple Macintosh Quadra 700 computer using a program especially designed for this purpose. Two nerve endings of the palmar net of the median nerve were visualized together with their accompanying Schwann cells and the surrounding processes of fibroblasts. Naked axons invade straightly into the embryonic connective tissue and serve as contact guidance for the Schwann cells to follow. Fibroblasts with long processes extend around the axons with a parallel orientation. Contacts between axons and fibroblasts are occasionally observed. It is unclear whether the parallel orientation of nerve endings and fibroblast extensions have any biological significance.  相似文献   

12.
Schwann cells as regulators of nerve development.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Myelinating and non-myelinating Schwann cells of peripheral nerves are derived from the neural crest via an intermediate cell type, the Schwann cell precursor [K.R. Jessen, A. Brennan, L. Morgan, R. Mirsky, A. Kent, Y. Hashimoto, J. Gavrilovic. The Schwann cell precursor and its fate: a study of cell death and differentiation during gliogenesis in rat embryonic nerves, Neuron 12 (1994) 509-527]. The survival and maturation of Schwann cell precursors is controlled by a neuronally derived signal, beta neuregulin. Other factors, in particular endothelins, regulate the timing of precursor maturation and Schwann cell generation. In turn, signals derived from Schwann cell precursors or Schwann cells regulate neuronal numbers during development, and axonal calibre, distribution of ion channels and neurofilament phosphorylation in myelinated axons. Unlike Schwann cell precursors, Schwann cells in older nerves survive in the absence of axons, indicating that a significant change in survival regulation occurs. This is due primarily to the presence of autocrine growth factor loops in Schwann cells, present from embryo day 18 onwards, that are not functional in Schwann cell precursors. The most important components of the autocrine loop are insulin-like growth factors, platelet derived growth factor-BB and neurotrophin 3, which together with laminin support long-term Schwann cell survival. The paracrine dependence of precursors on axons for survival provides a mechanism for matching precursor cell number to axons in embryonic nerves, while the ability of Schwann cells to survive in the absence of axons is an absolute prerequisite for nerve repair following injury. In addition to providing survival factors to neurones and themselves, and signals that determine axonal architecture, Schwann cells also control the formation of peripheral nerve sheaths. This involves Schwann cell-derived Desert Hedgehog, which directs the transition of mesenchymal cells to form the epithelium-like structure of the perineurium. Schwann cells thus signal not only to themselves but also to the other cellular components within the nerve to act as major regulators of nerve development.  相似文献   

13.
Schwann cells, the myelin-forming cells of the peripheral nervous system, are surrounded by a basement membrane. Whether cultured rat Schwann cells synthesize the basement membrane-specific components, laminin and collagen type IV, and whether these components influence the adhesion, morphology, and growth of these cells have been investigated. Both laminin and collagen type IV were detected in the cytoplasm of Schwann cells by immunofluorescence. After ascorbate treatment, laminin and collagen type IV were both found in an extracellular fibrillar matrix bound to the Schwann cell surface. Laminin was further localized on the Schwann cell surface by electron microscopy using gold immunolabeling. Anti-laminin IgG-labeled gold particles were scattered over the cell surface, and linear rows of particles and small aggregates were found along the cell edges and at points of contact with other cells. When added to the culture medium, laminin acted as a potent adhesion factor, stimulating Schwann cell adhesion as much as eightfold above control levels on type IV collagen. In the presence of laminin, the cells became stellate and by 24 hr had extended long, thin processes. Laminin also stimulated cell growth in a dose-dependent manner and anti-laminin IgG completely inhibited cell attachment and growth in the absence of exogenous laminin. Thus, cultured Schwann cells synthesize laminin and collagen type IV, two major components of basement membrane, and laminin may trigger Schwann cell differentiation in vivo during early stages of axon-Schwann cell interaction before myelination.  相似文献   

14.
《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2439-2448
The cellular and subcellular localization of the neural cell adhesion molecules L1, N-CAM, and myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG), their shared carbohydrate epitope L2/HNK-1, and the myelin basic protein (MBP) were studied by pre- and post-embedding immunoelectron microscopic labeling procedures in developing mouse sciatic nerve. L1 and N-CAM showed a similar staining pattern. Both were localized on small, non-myelinated, fasciculating axons and axons ensheathed by non- myelinating Schwann cells. Schwann cells were also positive for L1 and N-CAM in their non-myelinating state and at the onset of myelination, when the Schwann cell processes had turned approximately 1.5 loops. Thereafter, neither axon nor Schwann cell could be detected to express the L1 antigen, whereas N-CAM was found in the periaxonal area and, more weakly, in compact myelin of myelinated fibers. Compact myelin, Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, paranodal loops, and finger-like processes of Schwann cells at nodes of Ranvier were L1-negative. At the nodes of Ranvier, the axolemma was also always L1- and N-CAM-negative. The L2/HNK-1 carbohydrate epitope coincided in its cellular and subcellular localization most closely to that observed for L1. MAG appeared on Schwann cells at the time L1 expression ceased. MAG was then expressed at sites of axon-myelinating Schwann cell apposition and non-compacted loops of developing myelin. When compaction of myelin occurred, MAG remained present only at the axon-Schwann cell interface; Schmidt- Lanterman incisures, inner and outer mesaxons, and paranodal loops, but not at finger-like processes of Schwann cells at nodes of Ranvier or compacted myelin. All three adhesion molecules and the L2/HNK-1 epitope could be detected in a non-uniform staining pattern in basement membrane of Schwann cells and collagen fibrils of the endoneurium. MBP was detectable in compacted myelin, but not in Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, inner and outer mesaxon, paranodal loops, and finger-like processes at nodes of Ranvier, nor in the periaxonal regions of myelinated fibers, thus showing a complementary distribution to MAG. These studies show that axon-Schwann cell interactions are characterized by the sequential appearance of cell adhesion molecules and MBP apparently coordinated in time and space. From this sequence it may be deduced that L1 and N-CAM are involved in fasciculation, initial axon-Schwann cell interaction, and onset of myelination, with MAG to follow and MBP to appear only in compacted myelin. In contrast to L1, N- CAM may be further involved in the maintenance of compact myelin and axon-myelin apposition of larger diameter axons.  相似文献   

15.
Intramural neurons in the urinary bladder of the guinea-pig   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Summary The urinary bladder of adult female guinea-pigs was stained histochemically to detect the presence of intramural ganglion neurons. Counts on wholemount preparations of entire bladders revealed the presence of 2000–2500 neurons per bladder, either as individual nerve cells or, more often, as ganglia containing up to 40 neurons. Both ganglia and single neurons lie along nerve trunks and are interconnected to form a plexus. Ganglia occur in every part of the bladder; they are more numerous on the dorsal than on the ventral wall, and they are especially abundant in an area within a radius of 800 m from the point of entry into the bladder wall of ureters and urinary arteries. The ganglia are located inside the muscle coat and close to muscle bundles; they usually lie nearer the mucosa than the serosa. Ultrastructurally, each ganglion is surrounded by a capsule; in addition to neurons and glial cells, the ganglia contain capillaries, collagen fibrils and fibroblasts; ganglion neurons are individually wrapped by glial cells and are separated from one another by connective tissue.  相似文献   

16.
The localization of the neural cell adhesion molecules L1, N-CAM, and the myelin-associated glycoprotein was studied by pre- and postembedding staining procedures at the light and electron microscopic levels in transected and crushed adult mouse sciatic nerve. During the first 2-6 d after transection, myelinated and nonmyelinated axons degenerated in the distal part of the proximal stump close to the transection site and over the entire length of the distal part of the transected nerve. During this time, regrowing axons were seen only in the proximal, but not in the distal nerve stump. In most cases L1 and N-CAM remained detectable at cell contacts between nonmyelinating Schwann cells and degenerating axons as long as these were still morphologically intact. Similarly, myelin-associated glycoprotein remained detectable in the periaxonal area of the degenerating myelinated axons. During and after degeneration of axons, nonmyelinating Schwann cells formed slender processes which were L1 and N-CAM positive. They resembled small-diameter axons but could be unequivocally identified as Schwann cells by chronical denervation. Unlike the nonmyelinating Schwann cells, only few myelinating ones expressed L1 and N-CAM. At the cut ends of the nerve stumps a cap developed (more at the proximal than at the distal stump) that contained S-100-negative and fibronectin-positive fibroblast-like cells. Most of these cells were N-CAM positive but always L1 negative. Growth cones and regrowing axons expressed N-CAM and L1 at contact sites with these cells. Regrowing axons of small diameter were L1 and N-CAM positive where they made contact with each other or with Schwann cells, while large-diameter axons were only poorly antigen positive or completely negative. 14 d after transection, when regrowing axons were seen in the distal part of the transected nerve, regrowing axons made L1- and N-CAM-positive contacts with Schwann cells. When contacting basement membrane, axons were rarely found to express L1 and N-CAM. Most, if not all, Schwann cells associated with degenerating myelin expressed L1 and N-CAM. In crushed nerves, the immunostaining pattern was essentially the same as in the cut nerve. During formation of myelin, the sequence of adhesion molecule expression was the same as during development: L1 disappeared and N-CAM was reduced on myelinating Schwann cells and axons after the Schwann cell process had turned approximately 1.5 loops around the axon. Myelin-associated glycoprotein then appeared both periaxonally and on the turning loops of Schwann cells in the uncompacted myelin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The distinctive tissue localization of collagen types in typical schwannomas with Antoni type A and B areas was demonstrated immunohistochemically using affinity-purified antibodies against types I, III, IV, V and VI collagen and comparative ultrastructural studies were made on the extracellular matrix components. Antoni type A tissue, which was composed of tightly packed spindle cells with long cytoplasmic processes surrounded by a continuous basement membrane and a few fibrillar components of the extracellular matrix, was almost exclusively immunoreactive for type IV collagen, presumably representing the basement membrane. Verocay bodies, which are organoid structures of Antoni type A tissue, had a variety of more abundant extracellular fibrous components, such as banded collagen fibrils, fibrous long-spacing fibrils and microfibrils. These were positive for type I and III, as well as type IV collagen. In Antoni type B areas, where two types to tumor cells designated Schwann cell-like and fibroblast-like were scattered in large amounts of amorphous extracellular matrix containing microfibrils and thick banded collagen fibrils, type VI collagen as well as types I, III and IV collagen were consistently detected. Type V collagen was localized in dense fibrous tissue areas and around blood vessels. These findings indicate that the differently organized cellular patterns of schwannomas, identified as Antoni types A and B, are characterized not only by the ultrastructural features of the extracellular matrix, but also by the distinctive collagen types produced by neoplastic Schwann cells.  相似文献   

18.
The ventral nerve cord of the spiny lobster, Panulirus argus was examined by transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Tannic acid mordant stain was used to enhance extracellular filaments. The ventral nerve cord is surrounded by an unusual perineurial sheath composed primarily of interwoven extracellular filaments. Gap junctions were found associated with the glial cells making up the perineurium. The axo-glial wrappings also contained extracellular filaments associated in bundles rather than uniformly around the axons. The extracellular filaments of the perineurium and axo-glial wrappings appeared to be morphologically identical with diameters ranging from 10-15 nm.  相似文献   

19.
Lymph node nerve endings have been studied in 1- to 48-day-old mice. Serial sections of Epon-embedded lymph nodes were observed under the electron microscope to find the nerve endings. Most lymph node nerve fibers finally reach the smooth muscle cells of arterioles and muscular venules. Both kinds of vascular endings are similar, although endings are less numerous on venules. Nerve endings consist of one or more nerve processes surrounded by a usually incomplete Schwann cell sheath; frequently, axons show wide areas directly facing the muscle cells. The distance between such a naked axon and a myocyte ranges from 100 to 800 nm. Small granulated and clear vesicles are especially abundant in varicosities of nerve processes that are located very close to muscle cells. Nerve endings of lymph node vasculature probably correspond to vasomotor sympathetic adrenergic endings, regulating the degree of contraction of vessels which have a muscular layer. Other kinds of nerve endings also exist in lymph nodes: some axons appear free in the stroma and contact the surfaces of reticular cells; the latter also extend delicate cytoplasmic processes that surround the axons. The functional significance of nerve cell-reticular cell contacts is unknown.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the cellular mechanism of formation of subepidermal thick bundles of collagen (collagen lamella) during larval development of the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana, using cDNA of alpha1(I) collagen as a probe. The originally bilayered larval epidermis contains basal skein cells and apical cells, and the collagen lamella is directly attached to the basement membrane. The basal skein cells above the collagen lamella and fibroblasts beneath it intensively expressed the alpha1(I) gene. As the skin developed, suprabasal skein cells ceased expression of the gene. Concomitantly, the fibroblasts started to outwardly migrate, penetrated into the lamella and formed connective tissue between the epidermis and the lamella. These fibroblasts intensively expressed the gene. As the connective tissue developed, the basal skein cells ceased to express the gene and were replaced by larval basal cells that did not express the gene. These dynamic changes took place first in a lateral region of the body skin and proceeded to all other regions except the tail. Isolated cultured skein cells expressed the gene and extracellularly deposited its protein as the type I collagen fibrils. Thus, it is concluded that anuran larval epidermal cells can autonomously and intrinsically synthesize type I collagen.  相似文献   

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