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Journal ArticleDOI

Regeneration of hamster tracheal epithelium after mechanical injury. I. Focal lesions: quantitative morphologic study of cell proliferation.

TLDR
In this paper, the histogenesis of epidermoid metaplasia and restoration of normal mucociliary epithelium following mechanical injury was studied in hamster tracheal epithelial cells with single pulse or continuous infusion of tritiated thymidine (3HTdR) combined with colchicine blockade of metaphase mitoses.
Abstract
In companion papers we described in detail the morphologic changes that occur during tracheal regeneration following focal mechanical injury (Keenan et al. 1982a), and the proliferative events that occur following multifocal injury, particularly the dominant role played by the secretory cell population in the regenerative process. In this paper the histogenesis of epidermoid metaplasia and restoration of normal mucociliary epithelium following mechanical injury was studied in hamster tracheal epithelium with single pulse or continuous infusion of tritiated thymidine (3HTdR) combined with colchicine blockade of metaphase mitoses. Both small and large wounds were produced in the same animal, in the dorsal and ventral tracheal semicircles respectively. At 12 h following injury, 14.2% of the dorsal epithelial cells and 34.6% of the ventral epithelial cells were lost. Viable cells migrated into the denuded wound sites, covering the small wounds by 12 h and the larger wounds by 48 h. By 27 h a peak mitotic rate (MR) was reached in the dorsal epithelium (MR = 18.1%), but mitotic activity in the ventral epithelium did not peak until 33 h (MR = 13.3%). In both tracheal semicircles, secretory cells accounted for over 76% of the labeled mitotic cells. Ciliated cells did not label or divide. Epidermoid metaplasia was first observed at 33 h in both semicircles. It was transient in the small wounds, but persisted through 168 h in the large wounds. Almost all the epidermoid cells were labeled by continuous3HTdR infusion. A very few pre-ciliated cells appeared first at 33 h but they peaked in numbers at 72 h in both the dorsal (8.0%) and ventral (5.5%) semicircles. These large, pale staining cells were not labeled by single pulse3HTdR but were labeled by continuous3HTdR infusion. Later, large, pale staining cells morphologically similar to pre-ciliated cells, and with identical labeling patterns, were observed budding cilia. Ciliated cell numbers were restored to control level in the dorsal semicircle by 168 h, but only to 84% of control values in the ventral semicircle, where epidermoid metaplasia persisted. These data suggest that secretory cells have a greater proliferative potential than basal cells in regenerating tracheal epithelium, and that they contribute to the development of both transient and persistent epidermoid metaplasia and the production of new secretory cells. Moreover, these proliferating secretory cells produce ciliated cells via a transient pre-ciliated cell which develops cilia and matures in the regenerating epithelium.

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Basal cells are a multipotent progenitor capable of renewing the bronchial epithelium.

TL;DR: It is concluded that basal cells represent an alternative multipotent progenitor cell population of bronchial airways and that progenitors cell selection is dictated by the type of airway injury.
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Culture and transformation of human airway epithelial cells

TL;DR: The implementation of the in vitro cell culture systems that have now been established and the research into optimizing the conditions for the growth of airway epithelial cells have been and will continue to be essential in the development of therapies for airway disease.
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Tumor promotion in the liver.

TL;DR: Current knowledge mainly rests on the results of histological and histochemical studies but has reached a state where broader application of the techniques of biochemistry and molecular biology is both possible and necessary for further progress.
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Cell Migration and Proliferation During the In Vitro Wound Repair of the Respiratory Epithelium

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cell proliferation and cell migration during respiratory epithelial wound repair are differently expressed with regard to the cell location within the repairing area.
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Airway Epithelial Cell Migration Dynamics: MMP-9 Role in Cell–Extracellular Matrix Remodeling

TL;DR: Observations suggest that MMP-9 controls the migration of repairing HBEC by remodeling the provisional ECM implicated in primordial contacts, which is involved in cell migration.
References
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Book

Manual of histologic staining methods of the Armed forces institute of pathology

Lee G Luna
TL;DR: This work states that stem cells: mechanisms of inflammation,” Annual Review of Pathology, vol.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tissue changes following deprivation of fat-soluble a vitamin

TL;DR: The specific tissue changes which follow the deprivation of fat-soluble vitamin A in albino white rats and in the human concerns epithelial tissues are described and it is concluded that the deficiency results in loss of specific (chemical) functions of the epitheliums concerned, while the power of growth becomes augmented.
Journal Article

Histologic fixatives suitable for diagnostic light and electron microscopy.

TL;DR: The superior cross-linking features of glutaraldehyde are retained, while the concentration ofglutaraldehyde is low enough not to substantially obscure the PAS reaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell junctions in amphibian skin

TL;DR: Interpreted in the light of current physiological data, these findings suggest that the diffusion of water, ions, and small, water-soluble molecules is impeded along the intercellular spaces of the epidermis by zonulae occludentes while it is facilitated from cell to cell within the epidesis by z onulae and maculae OccludENTes.
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