Parental spleen cells accelerate the development of intestinal brush border structure and function in neonatal mice
1986
Abstract 1. 1. The influence of parental spleen cells on the postnatal development of brush border microvillus membrane structure and the ability to transport lysine and alanine has been studied in the mouse jejunum during the second week of postnatal life. 2. 2. Control tissue taken from 7–11 day old mice has an unchanging crypt-villus structure and a low enterocyte migration rate of about 1 μm hr −1 . 3. 3. Microvillus elongation in crypt enterocytes takes 6 days to complete under these conditions. 4. 4. Lysine and alanine transport begin 2 days after structural differentiation has ceased. 5. 5. Parental spleen cells injected into 1–2-day-old F 1 mice cause crypt cell hyperplasia, villus shortening and a 3–6-fold increase in enterocyte migration rate after a period of 8 days. 6. 6. These effects are associated with large reductions in the time needed to complete microvillus membrane development and first express absorptive function. 7. 7. Lysine and alanine transport begin approximately 6 hr after structural differentiation has ceased under these conditions. 8. 8. Adaptive changes in the development of enterocyte structure and function, induced by injection of parental spleen cells, bear some resemblance to other changes found to occur normally at weaning and in adult animals subjected to controlled changes in diet and environmental temperature. 9. 9. The possibility that common principles govern enterocyte adaptation and that some of these still apply in an intestine undergoing an immune reaction is discussed.
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