SummaryDifferential counts of electron microscope sections of cell pellets isolated from bovine udder secretions showed that no secretory epithelial cells and very few ductal epithelial cells were present at any stage. The predominant cell type was the macrophage in dry and lactating cows or the polymorphonuclear leucocyte (PMNL) in colostrum. Lymphocytes were also present but no plasma cells were found. The macrophages took up polystyrene latex particles (as did the PMNL) and adhered toglass in culture. Neither macrophage-nor PMNL-rich cell suspensions produced any increase in free fatty acid levels when incubated with fresh milk.
We established monolayer muscle fiber cultures from muscle biopsies of 3 patients with oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) who had characteristic intranuclear inclusions (INI-A) in their muscle fibers. Aneural cultures had normal morphology, except for a few muscle fibers that contained small vacuoles. Innervated cultures had large cytoplasmic vacuoles in a number of muscle fibers. Those muscle fibers were breaking easily, and could not be maintained longer than 2 months. Electron microscopy showed unusual intranuclear inclusions (INI-B) not previously reported in aneurally cultured muscle fibers of OPMD or in any normal or disease-control aneural or innervated cultured human muscle fibers. They resembled, but were not identical to, the INI-A, and they occurred in both the cultured fibers and the original muscle biopsies of all 3 patients. Our study demonstrate that (1) nuclear inclusions in OPMD reflect an intrinsic genetic defect; and (2) neuronal influence, advanced maturation, or both, seem to be essential for their induction in muscle fibers.
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