AI Article Synopsis

  • Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is an autoimmune disease that primarily disrupts the salivary glands, causing dry mouth (xerostomia); its progression is not well understood due to late diagnoses.
  • Research on NOD/ShiLtJ mice, which develop SS alongside autoimmune diabetes, revealed changes in the salivary gland structure over time, particularly a decrease in secretory cells and an increase in ductal cells as the disease progressed.
  • The study found that while immune cell infiltration (CD45R+) occurred, it didn't correlate with severe epithelial damage, suggesting that changes in cell types within the glands could contribute to reduced salivary function and may indicate responses to injury.

Article Abstract

Sjögren's syndrome (SS), an autoimmune exocrinopathy, is associated with dysfunction of the secretory salivary gland epithelium, leading to xerostomia. The etiology of SS disease progression is poorly understood as it is typically not diagnosed until late stage. Since mouse models allow the study of disease progression, we investigated the NOD/ShiLtJ mouse to explore temporal changes to the salivary epithelium. In the NOD/ShiLtJ model, SS presents secondary to autoimmune diabetes, and SS disease is reportedly fully established by 20 weeks. We compared epithelial morphology in the submandibular salivary glands (SMG) of NOD/ShiLtJ mice with SMGs from the parental strain at 12, 18, and 22 weeks of age and used immunofluorescence to detect epithelial proteins, including the acinar marker, aquaporin 5, ductal cell marker, cytokeratin 7, myoepithelial cell marker, smooth muscle α-actin, and the basal cell marker, cytokeratin 5, while confirming immune infiltrates with CD45R. We also compared these proteins in the labial salivary glands of human SS patients with control tissues. In the NOD/ShiLtJ SMG, regions of lymphocytic infiltrates were not associated with widespread epithelial tissue degradation; however, there was a decrease in the area of the gland occupied by secretory epithelial cells in favor of ductal epithelial cells. We observed an expansion of cells expressing cytokeratin 5 within the ducts and within the smooth muscle α-actin(+) basal myoepithelial population. The altered acinar/ductal ratio within the NOD/ShiLtJ SMG likely contributes to salivary hypofunction, while the expansion of cytokeratin 5 positive-basal cells may reflect loss of function or indicate a regenerative response.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4888376PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.23190DOI Listing

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