Intestinal myofibroblasts secrete substances that control organogenesis and wound repair of the intestine. The myofibroblasts of the rat small intestine express reelin and the present work explores whether reelin regulates crypt-villus unit homeostasis using normal mice and mice with the reelin gene disrupted (reeler). The results reveal that mouse small intestine expresses reelin, its receptors apolipoprotein E receptor 2 (ApoER2) and very low-density lipoprotein receptor (VldlR) and the reelin effector protein Disabled-1 (Dab1) and that reelin expression is restricted to myofibroblasts. The absence of reelin significantly reduces epithelial cell proliferation, migration, and apoptosis and the number of Paneth cells. These effects are observed during the suckling, weaning, and adult periods. The number of Goblet cells is increased in the 2-month-old reeler mice. The absence of reelin also expands the extracellular space of the adherens junctions and desmosomes without significantly affecting either the tight-junction structure or the epithelial paracellular permeability. In conclusion, this is the first in vivo work showing that the absence of reelin alters intestinal epithelium homeostasis.
In the present review we will summarise the current knowledge about the cells comprising the Diffuse Endocrine System (DES) in mammalian organs. We will describe the morphological, histochemical and functional traits of these cells in three major systems gastrointestinal, respiratory and prostatic. We will also focus on some aspects of their ontogeny and differentiation, as well as to their relevance in carcinogenesis, especially in neuroendocrine tumors. The first chapter describes the characteristics of DES cells and some of their specific biological and biochemical traits. The second chapter deals with DES in the gastrointestinal organs, with special reference to the new data on the differentiation mechanisms that leads to the appearance of endocrine cells from an undifferentiated stem cell. The third chapter is devoted to DES of the respiratory system and some aspects of its biological role, both, during development and adulthood. Neuroendocrine hyperplasia and neuroendocrine lung tumors are also addressed. Finally, the last chapter deals with the prostatic DES, discussing its probable functional role and its relevance in hormone-resistant prostatic carcinomas.
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