English
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Differentiation 1983

Inductive properties of fibroblastic cell cultures derived from rat intestinal mucosa on epithelial differentiation.

Only registered users can translate articles
Log In/Sign up
The link is saved to the clipboard
K Haffen
B Lacroix
M Kedinger
P M Simon-Assmann

Keywords

Abstract

The present study represents a first attempt to elucidate the regulatory properties displayed by the non-epithelial portion of the intestinal mucosa, growing as fibroblasts in monolayer cultures. Thus, we compared the inductive action of 6-day suckling rat duodenal fibroblasts with that displayed by chick embryonic intestinal mesenchyme on the heterotypic cytodifferentiation of 5 1/2-day chick embryonic gizzard endoderm. The latter, isolated by 0.03% collagenase, was surrounded by intestinal intramucosal fibroblastic cell sheets. As control experiments, fibroblastic cells derived from the intestinal muscle or from 20-day fetal rat skin and lung were used. Every type of association was grafted into the coelomic cavity of 3-day chick embryos for 11 to 12 days, a system providing their vascularization and growth. The results clearly demonstrate that the mucosal fibroblastic cells of rat intestine were as potent as embryonic intestinal mesenchyme in inducing brush-border enzymes like sucrase and maltase, in conformity with an induced intestinal morphology. In contrast, the control fibroblastic cells were completely ineffective.

Join our facebook page

The most complete medicinal herbs database backed by science

  • Works in 55 languages
  • Herbal cures backed by science
  • Herbs recognition by image
  • Interactive GPS map - tag herbs on location (coming soon)
  • Read scientific publications related to your search
  • Search medicinal herbs by their effects
  • Organize your interests and stay up do date with the news research, clinical trials and patents

Type a symptom or a disease and read about herbs that might help, type a herb and see diseases and symptoms it is used against.
*All information is based on published scientific research

Google Play badgeApp Store badge