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      Call for Papers: Epidemiology and Health Impacts of Neuroendocrine Tumors

      Submit here before August 30, 2024

      About Neuroendocrinology: 3.2 Impact Factor I 8.3 CiteScore I 1.009 Scimago Journal & Country Rank (SJR)

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      Evolution of the diffuse neuroendocrine system--clear cells and cloudy origins.

      Neuroendocrinology
      APUD Cells, physiology, Animals, Cell Communication, Enteroendocrine Cells, Gastroenterology, history, Gastrointestinal Hormones, History, 16th Century, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, History, Ancient, Hormones, Humans, Neuroendocrinology, Neurosecretory Systems

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          Abstract

          As early as the 2nd century, Galen proposed that 'vital spirits' in the blood regulated human bodily functions. However, the concept of hormonal activity required a further 18 centuries to develop and relied upon the identification of 'ductless glands', Schwann's cell and the recognition by Bayliss and Starling of chemical messengers. Bernard's introduction of 'internal secretion' and its role in homeostasis laid a physiological basis for the development of endocrinology. Kocher and Addison recognized the consequences of ablation of glands by disease or surgery and identified their necessary role in life. Detailed descriptions of the endocrine cells of the gut and pancreas and their putative function were provided by Heidenhain, Langerhans, Laguesse and Sharpey-Schafer. Despite the dominant 19th century concept of nervism (Pavlov), in 1902, Starling and Bayliss using Hardy's term 'hormonos' described secretin and in so doing, established the gut as an endocrine organ. Thus, nervism was supplanted by hormonal regulation of function and thereafter numerous bioactive gut peptides and amines were identified. At virtually the same time (1892), Ramón y Cajal of Madrid reported the existence of a group of specialized intestinal cells that he referred to as 'interstitial cells'. Cajal postulated that they might function as an interface between the neural system and the smooth muscles of the gut. Some 22 years later, Keith suggested that their function might be analogous to the electroconductive system of the heart and proposed their role as components of an intestinal pacemaker system. This prescient hypothesis was subsequently confirmed in 1982 by Thuneberg and a decade later Maede identified c-Kit as a critical molecular regulator in the development and function of the interstitial cells of Cajal and further confirmed the commonality of neural and endocrine cells. The additional characterization of the endocrine regulatory system of the GI tract was implemented when Feyrter (1938) using Masson's staining techniques, identified 'helle Zellen' within the pancreatic ductal system and the intestinal epithelium and proposed the concept of a diffuse neuroendocrine system. Pearse subsequently grouped the various cells belonging to that system under the rubric of a unifying APUD series. Currently, the gut neuroendocrine system is viewed as a syncytium of neural and endocrine cells sharing a common cell lineage whose phenotypic regulation is as yet unclear. Their key role in the regulation of gastrointestinal function is, however, indubitable.

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          Most cited references27

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          The cytochemistry and ultrastructure of polypeptide hormone-producing cells of the APUD series and the embryologic, physiologic and pathologic implications of the concept.

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            Neuroendocrine-immune interactions.

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              Blockade of kit signaling induces transdifferentiation of interstitial cells of cajal to a smooth muscle phenotype.

              Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) serve as pacemaker cells and mediators of neurotransmission from the enteric nervous system to gastrointestinal muscles. ICC develop from mesenchymal cells that express c-Kit, and signaling via Kit receptors is necessary for normal development of ICC. We studied the fate of functionally developed ICC after blockade of Kit receptors to determine whether ICC undergo cell death or whether the phenotype of the cells is modified. The fate of undeveloped ICC was also investigated. Neutralizing, anti-Kit monoclonal antibody (ACK2) was administered to mice for 8 days after birth. ICC in the small intestine were examined by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy. Occurrence of apoptosis was also assayed. When Kit receptors were blocked, ICC nearly disappeared from the small intestine. Apoptosis was not detected in regions where ICC are normally distributed. Remaining Kit-immunopositive cells in the pacemaker region of the small intestine developed ultrastructural features similar to smooth muscle cells, including prominent filament bundles and expression of the muscle-specific intermediate filament protein, desmin, and smooth muscle myosin. ICC of the deep muscular plexus normally develop after birth in the mouse. Precursors of these cells remained in an undifferentiated state when Kit was blocked. These data, along with previous studies showing that ICC in the pacemaker region of the small intestine and longitudinal muscle cells develop from the same Kit-immunopositive precursor cells, suggest inherent plasticity between the ICC and smooth muscle cells that is regulated by Kit-dependent cell signaling.
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