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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Cell proliferation, differentiation and transformation in the rat submandibular gland during early postnatal growth. A quantitative and morphological study.

E. P. Alvares, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1975 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 3, pp 177-208
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TLDR
It was observed at the electron microscope that the architecturally complex terminal tubules, proacinar, acinar and striated duct cells retained mitosis the major ultrastructural features they exhibited in interphase.
Abstract
The development of the submandibular gland of the rat was studied between days 2 and 55 of the postpartum. Besides confirming previous ultrastructural findings wer observed at the electron microscope that the architecturally complex terminal tubules, proacinar, acinar and striated duct cells retained mitosis the major ultrastructural features they exhibited in interphase. The ultrastructure of cells that were in the S period of the proliferative cycle was evaluated in high resolution autoradiographs from rats injected with thymidine-H3. All cell types were thus studied and no obvious cytoarchitectural modifications could be detected in these cells preparing for dividion. We obtained ultrastructural evidence that between days 20 and 30 some terminal tubule cells undergo transformation into acinar cells. The intercalated duct cells showed the highest rate of proliferation and the lowest daily increment in number. This suggests that cells from the intercalated ducts migrate to the neighboring morphological compartments. Quantitative data on the rate of cell proliferation and accumulation in the straited duct indicated that cells from the intercalcated ducts should differentiate into straited duct cells. Differentiation of intercalated duct cells into the terminal tubule cells was observed with the electron microscope.

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Book ChapterDOI

The cytology of salivary glands.

TL;DR: The synthesis, intracellular transport, storage, and discharge of exportable protein by exocrine-secreting cells are also discussed.
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Salivary glands: a paradigm for diversity of gland development.

TL;DR: The origins of the salivary glands are examined by reviewing the expression patterns of several genes with known morphogenetic potential that may be involved based on developmental timing and location and the possibility that factors leading to determination of the sites of mammalianSalivary gland development might be homologous to the regulatory cascade leading to salivARY gland formation in Drosophila is evaluated.
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The granular convoluted tubule (GCT) cell of rodent submandibular glands

TL;DR: The granular convoluted tubule is a segment of the duct system of all rodents, situated between the striated and intercalated ducts that has the peculiar property of synthesizing a large variety of biologically active polypeptides whose role in saliva remains unknown.
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Postnatal developmental changes in submandibular glands of rats and mice.

TL;DR: The course of postnatal development of several GCT cell products is correlated with the cytodifferentiation of these cells, and reliable data are available for the development of amylase, proteases (including kallikrein), renin, epidermal growth factor, and nerve growth factor.
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Immunocytochemistry of myoepithelial cells in the salivary glands.

TL;DR: MECs, as the name implies, have structural features of both epithelial and smooth muscle cells that contract by autonomic nervous stimulation, and are thought to assist the secretion by compressing and/or reinforcing the underlying parenchyma.
References
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TL;DR: More rapid than previous techniques, this method gives blocks which do not fracture unduly on trimming and provides sections of soft tissues at 1 μ for phase contrast microscopy, as well as ultrathin sections which cut as easily with glass knives as sections of methacrylate.
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