In this morphological and immunohistochemical study we show that olfactory schwann cells (OSC) are derived from precursor cells residing in the olfactory epithelium. During development, they migrate out of the epithelium and extend processes to ensheath the olfactory axons. Olfactory mucosa from El
Supporting cell proliferation in the olfactory epithelium decreases postnatally
β Scribed by Elke Weiler; Albert I. Farbman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 566 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-1491
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
It is well known that progenitor cells in the basal layer of olfactory epithelium proliferate continuously throughout life; the offspring of these dividing cells produce replacements for receptor neurons. In the rat the number of proliferating basal cells/mm length of epithelium (proliferation density) decreases with postnatal age while the area of the olfactory sheet increases. The supporting cells, which act as the glia of the olfactory epithelium, also divide. We examined in detail some aspects of the dynamics of olfactory supporting cell proliferation to determine whether their rate of proliferation changes with age, and how it compares with the rate in basal progenitor cells. Using BrdU to label dividing cells, we determined the proliferation density of supporting cells and basal cells in 10 Β΅m coronal sections from six different anterior-posterior regions in rats ranging in age from birth (P1) until P333. We observed a dramatic decrease in supporting cell proliferation density from P1 (80 cells/mm) to P11 (32 cells/mm) to P21 (12 cells/mm); the density decreases continuously to P333 (0.4 cells/mm). This reduction was even more dramatic than that in the basal cell population (Weiler and Farbman, 1997). Analysis of the data for correlation between basal and supporting cell proliferation revealed a weak correlation in neonates but no correlation in older animals. This suggests that the mechanisms that regulate proliferation of the two cell types are different. Our data also indicate that the proliferation of supporting cells is related only to growth in surface area of the epithelium. No turnover seems to occur in the supporting cells as it does in the olfactory neurons, where proliferation of basal cells is necessary for both growth and replacement.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Extracellular purines and pyrimidines are important signaling molecules acting via purinergic cell-surface receptors in neurons, glia, and glia-like cells such as sustentacular supporting cells (SCs) of the olfactory epithelium (OE). Here, we thoroughly characterize ATP-induced responses in SCs of t
## Abstract Ageβrelated changes in cell proliferation, neuronal differentiation, and cell death in mouse olfactory neuroepithelium were investigated. Mice at the age of 10 days through 16 months were given a single injection of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). The olfactory mucosae were fixed at 9 timepoi
## Abstract Light microscope, electron microscope and autoradiographic techniques were used to determine whether, in the small intestinal epithelium of feeding tadpoles of __Xenopus laevis__, proliferation is limited to particular cells or to particular regions. Mitotic figures were classified as a
This review will discuss changes observed in the cell dynamics of the vomeronasal epithelium (VNE) of snakes during embryonic and postnatal growth. Recent work suggests that neuronal differentiation occurs early in VNE development. We have used an antibody to an evolutionarily conserved peptide sequ