| Literature DB >> 9096901 |
R S McCuskey1, J Nishida, D McDonnell, C Williams, O Koldovsky.
Abstract
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is contained in breast milk, is transported intact across the gastrointestinal mucosa during the suckling period, retains its biological activity, and affects hepatic growth. Whether or not EGF also influences postnatal hepatic development by affecting nonparenchymal cells or by modifying intrahepatic blood is not clear. As a result, the effect of EGF on the hepatic microvasculature was studied in suckling rats fed rat milk substitute (RMS) with and without EGF (100 ng/ml, i.e. twice the normal intake in breast milk) between days 11 and 14 and compared to pups breast-fed for 14 days. The livers of anesthetized pups were examined by in vivo microscopy to determine the numbers of sinusoids with flow (SCF) in each of 10 microscopic fields and the numbers of phagocytic Kupffer cells (KC) in the same fields following an intraportal injection of fluorescent 1-micron latex particles. Phagocytic activity was expressed as the ratio KC/SCF. In pups fed RMS without EGF, SCF and KC/SCF was 75 and 45%, respectively, of that in breast-fed animals. The addition of EGF to the RMS restored SCF and KC/SCF nearly to the levels measured in breast-fed pups. Thus, the results suggest that milk-borne EGF plays a role in the development of KC phagocytic function and affects the amount of blood that perfuses the sinusoidal bed in the suckling.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9096901 DOI: 10.1159/000244418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Neonate ISSN: 0006-3126