Nicotine does not cause ‘bronchitis’ in the rat

1986 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 427-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. F. Rogers ◽  
Deborah A. Williams ◽  
P. K. Jeffery

1. Nicotine is of interest as a major constituent of cigarette smoke and as an additive to chewing gum used to help patients to stop smoking. 2. Specific pathogen-free rats were given an aerosol or injections of nicotine hydrogen (+) tartrate (l-isomer) for 2 or 3 weeks at three doses and the number of secretory cells in the surface epithelium of airways was determined. 3. By aerosol, a dose giving 10 ng of nicotine/ml of plasma had no effect on secretory cell number. 4. By injection, nicotine had a ‘bi-phasic’ effect depending on dose: it reduced secretory cell number at plasma concentrations of 650 ng/ml of plasma or increased it at 2360 ng/ml of plasma. 5. Thus nicotine alone, given to rats at doses similar to those found in cigarette smokers and those who chew nicotine gum, does not cause secretory cell hyperplasia in the conducting airways of the rat.

eLife ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianjun Sun ◽  
Allan C Spradling

How oocytes are transferred into an oviduct with a receptive environment remains poorly known. We found that glands of the Drosophila female reproductive tract, spermathecae and/or parovaria, are required for ovulation and to promote sperm storage. Reducing total secretory cell number by interferring with Notch signaling during development blocked ovulation. Knocking down expression after adult eclosion of the nuclear hormone receptor Hr39, a master regulator of gland development, slowed ovulation and blocked sperm storage. However, ovulation (but not sperm storage) continued when only canonical protein secretion was compromised in adult glands. Our results imply that proteins secreted during adulthood by the canonical secretory pathway from female reproductive glands are needed to store sperm, while a non-canonical glandular secretion stimulates ovulation. Our results suggest that the reproductive tract signals to the ovary using glandular secretions, and that this pathway has been conserved during evolution.


Author(s):  
R. Carriere

The external orbital gland of the albino rat exhibits both sexual dimorphism and histological age changes. In males, many cells attain a remarkable degree of polyploidy and an increase of polyploid cell number constitutes the major age change until young adulthood. The acini of young adults have a small lumen and are composed of tall serous cells. Subsequently, many acini acquire a larger lumen with an irregular outline while numerous vacuoles accumulate throughout the secretory cells. At the same time, vesicular acini with a large lumen surrounded by pale-staining low cuboidal diploid cells begin to appear and their number increases throughout old age. The fine structure of external orbital glands from both sexes has been explored and in considering acinar cells from males, emphasis was given to the form of the Golgi membranes and to nuclear infoldings of cytoplasmic constituents.


Author(s):  
J.L. Carson ◽  
A.M. Collier

The ciliated cells lining the conducting airways of mammals are integral to the defense mechanisms of the respiratory tract, functioning in coordination with secretory cells in the removal of inhaled and cellular debris. The effects of various infectious and toxic agents on the structure and function of airway epithelial cell cilia have been studied in our laboratory, both of which have been shown to affect ciliary ultrastructure.These observations have led to questions about ciliary regeneration as well as the possible induction of ciliogenesis in response to cellular injury. Classical models of ciliogenesis in the conducting airway epithelium of the mammalian respiratory tract have been based primarily on observations of the developing fetal lung. These observations provide a plausible explanation for the embryological generation of ciliary beds lining the conducting airways but do little to account for subsequent differentiation of ciliated cells and ciliogenesis during normal growth and development.


Author(s):  
A. González-Angulo ◽  
S. Armendares-Sagrera ◽  
I. Ruíz de Chávez ◽  
H. Marquez-Monter ◽  
R. Aznar

It is a well documented fact that endometrial hyperplasia and adenocarcinoma may develop in women with Turner's syndrome who had received unopposed estrogen treatment (1), as well as in normal women under contraceptive medication with the sequential regime (2). The purpose of the present study was to characterize the possible changes in surface and glandular epithelium in these women who were treated with a sequential regime for a period of between three and eight years. The aim was to find organelle modifications which may lead to the understanding of the biology of an endometrium under exogenous hormone stimulation. Light microscopy examination of endometrial biopsies of nine patients disclosed a proliferative pattern; in two of these, there was focal hyperplasia. With the scanning electron microscope the surface epithelium in all biopsies showed secretory cells with microvilli alternating with non secretory ciliated cells. Regardless of the day of the cycle all biopsies disclosed a large number of secretory cells rich in microvilli (fig.l) with long and slender projections some of which were branching (fig. 2).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aram J. Krauson ◽  
Steven Schaffert ◽  
Elisabeth M. Walczak ◽  
Jonathan M. Nizar ◽  
Gwen M. Holdgate ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTFurosemide, a widely prescribed diuretic for edema-forming states, inhibits sodium reabsorption in the thick ascending limb of the nephron. Tubular adaptation to diuretics has been observed, but the range of mechanisms along the nephron has not been fully explored. Using morphometry, we show that furosemide induces renal tubular epithelial hyperplasia selectively in distal nephron segments. By comparison, we find progressive cellular hypertrophy in proximal and distal nephron segments. We next utilize single cell RNA sequencing of vehicle- and furosemide-treated mice to define potential mechanisms of diuretic resistance. Consistent with distal tubular cell hyperplasia, we detect a net increase in DCT cell number and Birc5, an anti-apoptotic and pro-growth gene, in a subset of DCT cells, as the most prominently up-regulated gene across the nephron. We also map a gradient of cell-specific transcriptional changes congruent with enhanced distal sodium transport. Furosemide stimulates expression of the mitogen IGF-1. Thus, we developed a mouse model of inducible deletion of renal tubular IGF-1 receptor and show reduced kidney growth and proximal, but not distal, tubular hypertrophy by furosemide. Moreover, genes that promote enhanced bioavailability of IGF-1 including Igfbp1 and Igfbp5 are significantly and differentially expressed in proximal tubular segments and correspond to IGF-1R-dependent hypertrophy. In contrast, downstream PI3-kinase signaling genes including Pdk1, Akt1, Foxo3, FKBP4, Eif2BP4, and Spp1 are significantly and differentially expressed in distal nephron segments and correspond to IGF-1R-independent hypertrophy. These findings highlight novel mechanisms of tubular remodeling and diuretic resistance, provide a repository of transcriptional responses to a common drug, and expand the implications of long-term loop diuretic use for human disease.


1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (8) ◽  
pp. 2100-2108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas W. Whitman ◽  
Johan P. J. Billen ◽  
David Alsop ◽  
Murray S. Blum

In the lubber grasshopper Romalea guttata, the respiratory system produces, stores, and delivers a phenolic defensive secretion. The exudate is secreted by a glandular epithelium surrounding the metathoracic spiracular tracheal trunks. Embedded in the glandular tissue are multiple secretory units, each comprised of a basal secretory cell and an apical duct cell. Secretory cells have numerous mitochondria, a tubular, smooth endoplasmic reticulum, well-developed Golgi bodies, and a microvillilined vesicle thought to transfer secretion to the intracellular cuticular duct of a duct cell. Ducts empty into the metathoracic tracheal lumina where the exudate is stored behind the closed metathoracic spiracle. Tactile stimulation elicits secretion discharge, which begins when all spiracles except the metathoracic pair are closed and the abdomen is compressed. Increased hemostatic and pneumatic pressures drive air and secretion out of the spiracle with an audible hiss. Both metathoracic spiracles discharge simultaneously. The secretion erupts first as a dispersant spray, then as an adherent froth, and finally assumes the form of a slowly evaporating repellent droplet. Discharge force and number vary with eliciting stimuli, volume of stored secretion, and age, disturbance state, and temperature of the insect. Molting grasshoppers are unable to discharge because the stored exudate is lost with the shed cuticle. The advantages and limitations of a tracheal defensive system are discussed.


1997 ◽  
Vol 1997 ◽  
pp. 130-130
Author(s):  
M.G. Goodwill ◽  
N.S. Jessop ◽  
J.D. Oldham

Milk production depends on both the number and activity of secretory cells within the mammary gland. Our earlier work showed the sensitivity of lactational performance to changes in diet during lactation (Goodwill et al, 1996). This study investigated the influence of protein undernutrition and re-alimentation on secretory cell proliferation and death in the mammary gland of rats during early lactation.


1999 ◽  
Vol 1999 ◽  
pp. 197-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. E. Pollott

Most functions used to describe the lactation curve of dairy animals are empirical in approach and result in parameters with little or no biological meaning. A new model for describing lactation based on the biology of the pregnant and lactating animal is proposed and compared to several empirical models (Wood, 1967; Grossman and Koops, 1988; Morant and Gnanasakthy, 1989).Lactation is thought of as the balance between an increase in secretory cell numbers (NSCP) and their later decline (NSCD). The difference between them is the number of active secretory cells, each of which secretes milk at a particular rate (S kg/cell/day). Thus daily milk yield (MY) = (NSCP – NSCD) x S.


2000 ◽  
Vol 279 (6) ◽  
pp. L1210-L1217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yohannes Tesfaigzi ◽  
Mark J. Fischer ◽  
Andrea J. Martin ◽  
Jeanclare Seagrave

Environmental toxins, infection, and allergens lead to a transient mucous cell hyperplasia (MCH) in airway epithelia; however, the mechanisms for reducing mucous cell numbers during recovery are largely unknown. This study investigated Bcl-2 expression in mucous cells induced by a neutrophilic or eosinophilic inflammatory response. Brown Norway rats intratracheally instilled with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) showed an inflammatory response characterized primarily by neutrophils. Secreted mucin was increased fourfold at 1 day, and the number of mucous cells was increased fivefold 2, 3, and 4 days post-LPS instillation compared with those in noninstilled rats. None of the mucous cells in non- or saline-instilled control animals expressed Bcl-2, whereas 20–30% of mucous cells were Bcl-2 positive 1 and 2 days post-LPS instillation. Brown Norway rats immunized and challenged with ovalbumin (OVA) for 2, 4, and 6 days showed an inflammatory response characterized primarily by eosinophils. Secreted mucin increased fivefold, and mucous cell number increased fivefold after 4 and 6 days of OVA exposure compared with water-immunized control rats challenged with OVA aerosols. Approximately 10–25% of mucous cells were Bcl-2 positive in OVA-immunized and -challenged rats. These data demonstrate Bcl-2 expression in hyperplastic mucous cells of Brown Norway rats regardless of the type of inflammatory response and indicate that apoptotic mechanisms may be involved in the resolution of MCHs.


2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 732-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
Payam Benyamini ◽  
Paul Webster ◽  
David I. Meyer

We have previously reported that the expression in yeast of an integral membrane protein (p180) of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), isolated for its ability to mediate ribosome binding, is capable of inducing new membrane biogenesis and an increase in secretory capacity. To demonstrate that p180 is necessary and sufficient for terminal differentiation and acquisition of a secretory phenotype in mammalian cells, we studied the differentiation of a secretory cell line where p180 levels had been significantly reduced using RNAi technology and by transiently expressing p180 in nonsecretory cells. A human monocytic (THP-1) cell line, that can acquire macrophage-like properties, failed to proliferate rough ER when p180 levels were lowered. The Golgi compartment and the secretion of apolipoprotein E (Apo E) were dramatically affected in cells expressing reduced p180 levels. On the other hand, expression of p180 in a human embryonic kidney nonsecretory cell line (HEK293) showed a significant increase in proliferation of rough ER membranes and Golgi complexes. The results obtained from knockdown and overexpression experiments demonstrate that p180 is both necessary and sufficient to induce a secretory phenotype in mammalian cells. These findings support a central role for p180 in the terminal differentiation of secretory cells and tissues.


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