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  • Cell classification  (1)
  • Feulgen reaction  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Protoplasma 160 (1991), S. 5-38 
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Radioautography ; Cell classification ; Cell renewal ; Protein turnover ; extracellular matrix stability
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Some 50 years ago, Schoenheimer, Hevesy, and their followers discovered that the substances making up the organs of the body were in a dynamic state. When a precise method was devised for radioautography in 1946, it became possible to examine how whole cells, intracellular components, and extracellular matrix participated in this dynamism. Whole cells have been classified according to their ability to proliferate, as measured in3H-thymidine radioautographs. Some cell populations, such as cortical neurons, do not proliferate and are calledstatic. Many others, such as kidney cell populations, proliferate at a slow rate that decreases with age and are calledexpanding. The cells in these two groups appear to live on as long as the individual. In a third group, cell populations such as those of surface epithelia and blood proliferate at a rapid rate and are calledrenewing; new cells continually arise from mitosis, differentiate to a functional stage and, thereafter, die. Renewing cell populations are under the dual control of genetic and environmental factors. Intracellular components turn over at variable but generally rapid rates. Thus, all cells, whether they belong to static, expanding or renewing populations, are labeled in radioautographs prepared after injection of3H-amino acids and, therefore, continually synthesize proteins. The newly-synthesized proteins migrate from ribosomes to nucleus, mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum. From the latter, they may be traced to the Golgi apparatus, where their glycosylation is completed; they are then delivered to lysosomes, plasma membrane and, outside of some cells, by means of secretory granules. Like proteins, other intracellular components, namely RNAs, carbohydrates and lipids undergo turnover. However, while DNA and associated histones may be duplicated for mitosis, they otherwise remain completely stable. Extracellular matrices are of two main types: stromal matrices and basement membranes. Stromal matrices include a series of compact structures, such as dentin, elastic tissue and bone, whose components are mainly stable, with the exception of bone remodeling areas. As for connective tissue components, the turnover rate seems to decrease with the compactness. In basement membrane, limited evidence indicates that laminin turns over at a slow rate and heparan sulfate proteoglycan at a rapid rate, while type IV collagen might be stable. Thus, with few exceptions, extracellular matrix components turn over slowly or not at all. In conclusion, the dynamic state of body components arises from three different sources: (1) the extracellular matrix provides a rather small contribution; (2) cells in renewing populations provide an important share; (3) the turnover of intracellular components, that is proteins, RNAs, and other substances is the major factor in the dynamism of body components. The renewal of intracellular components occurs from bacteria to man. It is an essential feature of life.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0003-276X
    Keywords: Feulgen reaction ; Cell cycle ; Chromosomes ; Interphase ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The Feulgen reaction has been utilized to localize DNA in nuclei throughout the cycle of mouse duodenal crypt cells using Epon-embedded 1 μm thick sections. The observed changes indicate that the 12.3 h long mitotic cycle of these cells can be subdivided into eleven stages, seven of which take place during the interphase. Computer measurements of Feulgen-stained nuclei and previous radioautographic studies indicate that DNA synthesis begins during stage I and ends during stage IV. The staining pattern shows no distinctive feature in the nuclei of the 1.5 h long stage I. Thereafter, marked changes occur during the rest of the interphase - that is during the 6.3 h that precede karyokinesis and the 3.5 h that follow it. Thus, at stage II the background of the nuclei darkens; at stage III, there appear stained threads interpreted as densifying chromosomes and dots interpreted as chromomeres, both of which thicken from 0.2 to 0.4 μm; at stage IV they further thicken to about 0.5 μm and at stage V, to about 0.7 μm. At this stage, which approximately corresponds to prophase, the intensely stained, discrete dots are localized within the less intensely stained sausage-shaped threads. As the breakup of the nuclear envelope introduces stage VI, whose early part corresponds to prometaphase, the intensely stained dots become close to one another within the threads and eventually fuse. The staining of the threads thus intensifies, and, by the late part of the stage that corresponds to metaphase, they have become the homogeneously dense metaphase chromosomes. At stage VII, the anaphase chromosomes reach each pole where they associate into a compact mass. This mass remains solid at stage VIII but gradually dissociates during stages IX, X, and XI as chromosomes are disassembled. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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