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Journal ArticleDOI

The development of the intrahepatic bile ducts in man: a keratin-immunohistochemical study.

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TLDR
The development of the intrahepatic bile ducts in man was studied using an immunohistochemical technique on 56 liver specimens ranging in age from 6 weeks of gestation to 8 months after birth.
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This article is published in Hepatology.The article was published on 1988-11-01. It has received 285 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Intrahepatic bile ducts & Bile duct.

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Liver regeneration and repair: Hepatocytes, progenitor cells, and stem cells

TL;DR: The review of the rapidly expanding literature presented here, particularly as it deals with stem cells, was guided by a few principles: be wary of dogma1 and of overinterpretation of data.
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Congenital diseases of intrahepatic bile ducts: variations on the theme "ductal plate malformation".

TL;DR: This review will emphasize that in most if not all of these conditions, persistence or lack of remodeling of the embryonic ductal plate (so-called “ductal plate malformation” [DPM]) is an essential precursor of the lesions.
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Isolation and characterization of a stem cell population from adult human liver

TL;DR: A pluripotent progenitor population in adult human liver that could provide a basis for cell therapy strategies is identified and characterized by stringent conditions of liver cell cultures.
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The onecut transcription factor HNF6 is required for normal development of the biliary tract

TL;DR: It is concluded that H NF6 is essential for differentiation and morphogenesis of the biliary tract and that intrahepatic bile duct development is controlled by a HNF6-->HNF1beta cascade.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The catalog of human cytokeratins: Patterns of expression in normal epithelia, tumors and cultured cells

TL;DR: During cell transformation and tumor devel- opment this cell type specificity of intermediate filaments is largely conserved’ and classification of tumors by their specific type of intermediate Filaments has re- cently become very valuable in clinical histodiagnosis.
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Monoclonal antibody to cytokeratin for use in routine histopathology.

TL;DR: CAM 5.2 is a murine monoclonal antibody, raised against the colon carcinoma cell line HT29, which recognises lower molecular weight intracellular cytokeratin proteins within secretory epithelia.
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Monoclonal antibodies provide specific intramolecular markers for the study of epithelial tonofilament organization.

E. B. Lane
TL;DR: The monoclonal antibodies described here demonstrate the presence of a simple epithelium antigenic determinant associated with intermediate filaments that is not detectable in the specialized cells of squamous and keratinizing epithelia but can reappear in such cells after transformation.
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Antibody to prekeratin: Decoration of tonofilament-like arrays in various cells of epithelial character

TL;DR: It is concluded that several epithelial cells which are capable of continuous division in culture continuously produce large, balanced amounts of prekeratin-like material which is assembled in tonofilament-like structures.
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Complex Cytokeratin Polypeptide Patterns Observed in Certain Human Carcinomas

TL;DR: Using cytoskeletal proteins from human biopsies and autopsies, the cytokeratin polypeptide patterns of diverse primary and metastatic carcinomas are examined and compared with those of corresponding normal epithelial tissues and cultured cells and the possibility of cell type heterogeneity within a given tumor is discussed.
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