R S Redman1. 1. Oral Pathology Research Laboratory, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Washington, DC 20422, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In contrast to the considerable amount of research that has been done on the proliferative activity of the several types of parenchymal cells in the developing submandibular glands of rodents, systematic studies of cellular proliferation in the developing parotid gland have been confined to the acinar cells. The purpose of the present study was to attempt to fill this knowledge gap. METHODS: Tritiated thymidine was parenterally administered to Sprague-Dawley rats at ages representative of the pre- and postnatal development of the parotid gland, and glands were harvested for autoradiography 90 min after injection. Mitotic activity among all cell types was verified by electron microscopy. RESULTS: At all ages, the % labeled cells was much greater among the acini than any other cell type, including well-differentiated cells at 25 and 40 days. However, there were only small alterations in the proportions of cells comprised by the major cell types. CONCLUSIONS: Current theories on the histogenesis of salivary glands and their neoplasms are based on the renewing population model, in which both normal differentiated cells and neoplastic cells arise from undifferentiated stem cells in the ducts. However, these results suggest that most of the migration and redifferentiation in the developing rat parotid gland must be in the opposite direction, i.e., the acinar cells redifferentiate into ductal cells. They also indicate that until there are precise data on the rates of cell death among the several cell types, it remains more appropriate for salivary glands to be categorized as an expanding, rather than renewing, population.
BACKGROUND: In contrast to the considerable amount of research that has been done on the proliferative activity of the several types of parenchymal cells in the developing submandibular glands of rodents, systematic studies of cellular proliferation in the developing parotid gland have been confined to the acinar cells. The purpose of the present study was to attempt to fill this knowledge gap. METHODS:Tritiated thymidine was parenterally administered to Sprague-Dawley rats at ages representative of the pre- and postnatal development of the parotid gland, and glands were harvested for autoradiography 90 min after injection. Mitotic activity among all cell types was verified by electron microscopy. RESULTS: At all ages, the % labeled cells was much greater among the acini than any other cell type, including well-differentiated cells at 25 and 40 days. However, there were only small alterations in the proportions of cells comprised by the major cell types. CONCLUSIONS: Current theories on the histogenesis of salivary glands and their neoplasms are based on the renewing population model, in which both normal differentiated cells and neoplastic cells arise from undifferentiated stem cells in the ducts. However, these results suggest that most of the migration and redifferentiation in the developing rat parotid gland must be in the opposite direction, i.e., the acinar cells redifferentiate into ductal cells. They also indicate that until there are precise data on the rates of cell death among the several cell types, it remains more appropriate for salivary glands to be categorized as an expanding, rather than renewing, population.
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