Aims: Transplantation of rat hepatocytes into the syngeneic rat spleen results in the appearance of cytokeratin (CK)7 and CK19 positive biliary cells that form ductules. We examined whether hepatocytes are the origin of these biliary ductular cells.
Methods: We transplanted rat dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV) positive hepatocytes into the liver of retrorsine-treated and partially hepatectomised DPPIV negative rats, which resulted in proliferation of DPPIV positive hepatocytes in the liver.
Objective: Recently, we showed that osteopontin (OPN), a major acidic phosphorylated glycoprotein of bone, participates in the pathological calcification that occurs as a result of chronic otitis media. To investigate the possibility of OPN as a common regulator of the pathological calcification in the middle ear, we here examined whether or not OPN is localized at the calcification sites of cholesteatoma, which is clearly different from chronic otitis media in the pathogenesis.
Methods: Middle ear tissues including cholesteatoma were obtained from 32 cases who underwent tympanoplasty.
Background/aims: Recently, it has been shown that the c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase (KIT) is expressed in the liver of young rats, and its expression is up-regulated in bile epithelial cells (BEC) after ligation of the common bile duct (BDL). To clarify a role of KIT in BEC, we examined whether BEC of Ws/Ws rats, whose KIT kinase activity was severely impaired, could proliferate in response to bile stasis after BDL.
Methods/results: When 2-week-old control normal (+/+) and Ws/Ws mutant rats underwent BDL, only a few BEC were found in the portal field of livers of Ws/Ws rats, whereas many BEC were found in that of +/+ rats.