Transmission electron microscopy of thin sections of the rat incisor pulp revealed that in the middle region of the incisor there were fenestrated capillaries in the "predentinal plexus" and that this region contained the tallest odontoblasts. The odontoblasts gradually became shortened in the incisal part of this region; the fenestrated capillaries in the predentinal plexus changed to continuous type capillaries. Almost all the odontoblasts had degenerated near the incisal end of the tooth. The predentinal plexus disappeared in this region, but the "subodontoblastic capillary plexus" persisted. In a specific region just beneath the worn incisal end, numerous macrophages and polymorphonuclear neutrophils appeared and scavenged the degenerating cells, possibly including the odontoblasts.
Human membrane cofactor protein (MCP, CD46) is a receptor for the measles virus and serves as a complement regulator which protects host cells from autologous complement attack. MCP is highly polymorphic due to a variety of mRNA splice products. The levels of MCP expression on T and myeloid cell lines are usually two-eightfold higher than those on their normal counterparts, whereas Burkitt's lymphoma B cell lines express less MCP than B cell lineages carrying no EB virus. The molecule has a Ser/Thr-rich (ST) domain adjacent to the functional domain, namely short consensus repeats (SCR). The ST domain and a cytoplasmic tail (CYT) contribute to the MCP polymorphism. The ST domain is encoded by three exons (A, B and C) and major ST isoforms are STABC, STBC and STC. The authors investigated the relationship between the expression levels and isoform usage of MCP by flow cytometry using specific antibodies against STA and STC, by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) with size markers for each splice variant, and by RT-PCR/Southern blotting using a specific probe for STA. The results were (1) the profiles of mean shifts of myeloid and T cell lines were STC < STA on flow cytometry while those of B cell lines and normal blood cells were STA < STC; (2) all cell lines tested by RT-PCR expressed the messages for the isoforms STBC/CYT1, STC/CYT1, STBC/CYT2, and STC/CYT2. The band for STABC/CYT2 overlapped that for STC/CYT1, and the band for STABC/CYT1 was marginal in all cell lines examined; (3) semi-quantitative analysis of the STABC isoforms by Southern blotting indicated the presence of high levels of the STABC messages in myeloid and T-cell lines in comparison with B lymphoid cells and normal leucocytes. Thus, the quantity of MCP expressed parallels the STABC message level, which is up-regulated in T and myeloid leukaemia cell lines.
Abstract:As revealed by electron microscopy, we observed two types of blood capillaries in the rat incisor peripheral pulp. One was a continuous capillary wall and the other was a fenestrated capillary wall. The former were found chiefly in the basal portion of the incisor and the latter were only in the incisal portion. The continuous capillary may change its configuration into the fenestrated capillary type at the middle portion of the incisor where the odontoblasts are young and the mineralization of dentin progresses remarkably.When the configurational change occured a thick endothelial swelling appeared in the capillary lumen. It seems that this distribution of capillaries is related to their function, i.e., the mineralization of dentin. In this study, we prepared the pulp materials for microscopy without decalcification by stripping off the hard tissues (enamel and dentin) from the pulp using fine tweezers. Using this technique, good results were obtained.
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