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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 179 (1977), S. 483-500 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Uterine cervix ; Epithelial explants ; Cell culture ; Ultrastructure ; Mouse
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary After gentle trypsinization, the pseudostratified columnar Müllerian epithelium that lines the uterine cervix of newborn mice could be separated from the enclosing stromal tissue. Pure epithelial tubes explanted in vitro and were allowed to grow in a standard medium for 3–4 days forming a confluent colony of rather closely-fitting cells. The cell sheet was studied by a preparatory technique that allows examination of a large number of cells with preserved intercellular spatial orientation. Attempts were made to identify cultured cells according to the morphology of cell types in the cervicovaginal epithelium in vivo. Electron micrographs revealed that, close to the explant, the cultured cell sheet exhibited several features similar to the Müllerian epithelium in vivo. Outside these central areas of the colony was a broad transitional zone consisting of thin platelike cells distinguished by an abundance of microfilaments. At the periphery of the colonies, bulky cells possessing microvilli and a vacuolated cytoplasm tended to overlap adjoining platelike cells. These bulky cells had a morphology resembling that of the superficial cells seen in the upper vagina and common cervical canal of immature and diestrous animals. The epithelial development in the cultures apparently simulated the transformation in vivo from a pseudostratified Müllerian epithelium in the newborn to a stratified epithelium resembling that of the uppermost vagina and common cervical canal of immature animals. Judged by morphological and cytochemical criteria, the Müllerian cells in the outgrowth obviously had many changed features. It thus seems questionable whether the cells grown in vitro are comparable with the corresponding cells in vivo when used for experiments requiring the controlled conditions of the culture environment.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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