112 results on '"Wollman SH"'
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2. Ultrastructure and some other properties of inverted thyroid follicles in suspension culture
- Author
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GARBI, CORRADO, WOLLMAN SH, Garbi, Corrado, and Wollman, Sh
- Published
- 1982
3. Radioiodine Uptake by Transplantable Tumors of the Thyroid Gland in C3H Mice. II. Theory
- Author
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Wollman Sh
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Radioiodine uptake ,Internal medicine ,Thyroid ,Medicine ,Radioactive iodine ,business - Published
- 1953
4. Analysis of Radioiodine Therapy of Metastatic Tumors of the Thyroid Gland in Man
- Author
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Wollman Sh
- Subjects
Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Thyroid ,Medicine ,Radioiodine therapy ,Radioactive iodine ,business - Published
- 1953
5. Autoradiographic localization of radioiodide in the thyroid gland of the mouse
- Author
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Andros, G, primary and Wollman, SH, additional
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Change of inverted thyroid follicle into a spheroid after embedding in a collagen gel
- Author
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Carlo Tacchetti, Seymour H. Wollman, Corrado Garbi, Garbi, Corrado, Tacchetti, C, and Wollman, Sh
- Subjects
Thyroid Gland ,Mitosis ,Biology ,Epithelium ,Suspension (chemistry) ,Follicle ,Cell Movement ,Culture Techniques ,Monolayer ,Animals ,Microvilli ,Cell Membrane ,Spheroid ,Epithelial Cells ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Rats ,Microscopy, Electron ,Intercellular Junctions ,Membrane ,Cell culture ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Biophysics ,Collagen ,Gels ,Lumen (unit) - Abstract
When inverted thyroid follicles in suspension culture are embedded in a collagen gel, there is extensive reorganization of the follicle. To identify intermediate stages in the reorganization, a suspension of inverted follicles was mixed with a cold solution of collagen (0.1 mg/ml) in culture medium and the resultant was warmed and allowed to gel. Prior to embedding, the epithelial cells bounding the lumens formed a monolayer of attenuated cells with their microvilli-bearing surface in contact with the medium. The first change noted was a shrinkage of the lumen in many follicles by 18 h. The cells became cuboidal to columnar. Some of the cells had long sheet-like processes extending into the lumen in contact with those of other cells. In late stages of the reorganization, 48 h, the cells were arranged in a compact spheroid. The spheroids contained two different kinds of colloid-filled lumens, possibly of different origins, one a spherical microlumen, the other very long and narrow in section. The peripheral cells of the spheroid had a smooth plasma membrane (without microvilli) in contact with collagen. Although most of the cells in a section had a microvilli-bearing surface forming part of the boundary of a lumen, it is not certain that all cells were in contact with a lumen.
- Published
- 1986
7. Qualitative hydrological and land-use planning tool for the Israel Coastal aquifer.
- Author
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Melloul AJ and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Agriculture, Decision Making, Geological Phenomena, Geology, Guidelines as Topic, Israel, Water Movements, Conservation of Natural Resources, Environment, Water Supply
- Abstract
Due to a variety of past and present land-usages on the aquifer ground surface, appropriate groundwater management should consider anthropogenic activities on the ground surface and the potential of unsaturated zone media to convey water and pollutants to the aquifer. The objective of this paper is to present an approach which generates guidelines and recommendations which can lead to sustainable development. This method assesses the lithological characteristics of the aquifer's vadose zone, indicating potential rechargeability, while weighting factors leading to potential groundwater pollution resulting from some land-use. Recommendations regarding land-use planning and aquifer recharge can then provide a qualitative ecological tool towards sustainable groundwater management. Owing to its location, its critical significance to the country's fresh water supply, and its available field data, Israel's Coastal aquifer is employed here as the study area for implementation of this approach.
- Published
- 2003
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8. Histological changes in TSH-dependent tumours of the thyroid gland during serial transplantation in Fischer 344 rats.
- Author
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Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Carcinogens, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic pathology, Female, Hyperplasia, Male, Neoplasm Transplantation, Neoplasms, Hormone-Dependent blood supply, Neoplasms, Hormone-Dependent physiopathology, Neovascularization, Pathologic, Pedigree, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Thiouracil, Thyroid Gland pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms blood supply, Thyroid Neoplasms physiopathology, Neoplasms, Hormone-Dependent pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyrotropin physiology
- Abstract
Transplantable tumours were induced in the thyroids of Fischer 344 rats fed thiouracil (TU) in a moderately low iodine diet for 8-13 months. Pieces of hyperplastic thyroid were implanted subcutaneously into rats fed a TU containing diet. Almost all implants gave rise to very small vascularized transplants but there were three significantly larger, pieces of which were transplanted again and gave rise to the tumour lines. From the third transplantation generation on, pieces of tumours were implanted into rats treated to have elevated circulating thyrotropin and a group fed a high iodine diet. With some exceptions, the implants grew only in rats fed the TU or a low iodine diet and yielded TSH-dependent tumours. Almost all the tumours observed initially were papillary, and most of the remainder had colloid-filled follicles bounded by columnar cells. One line of tumours was of the latter type for eight generations. The others had more complex histories, in which there were sublines that were papillary for eight or nine generations, whereas, others became progressively more cellular or follicular, and more heterogeneous with respect to histological types present per section at rates that varied with the subline. The large number of population doublings necessary to make a one gram tumour from a single original tumour cell indicates that the cells of dependent papillary tumours were immortalized.
- Published
- 1999
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- View/download PDF
9. Summary of observations on transplantable tumors of the rat thyroid gland.
- Author
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Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Carcinoma, Papillary pathology, Humans, Rats, Thyroid Gland, Neoplasm Transplantation methods, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Transplantable tumors of the thyroid gland have been produced by feeding of thiouracil (TU) to inbred Fischer 344 rats followed by the transplantation, initially, of pieces of hyperplastic thyroid gland, and in later generations, of pieces of transplanted tissue into similar rats or into rats fed a high iodine diet. In early generations, transplants grew only in the rats fed the TU diet, and this tissue was called dependent, whereas if the tissue grew in rats fed the high iodine diet in the absence of TU, it was called independent. Dependent tumors were, initially, either papillary or of follicles distended with colloid. Later generations of some sublines were cellular or microfollicular in pattern and some became progressively more heterogeneous with later generations. Independent tumors began to appear by the third transplant generation. They were, initially, relatively uniform in pattern, and some tended to remain so, whereas other sublines exhibited some heterogeneity. Tumors had patterns that were cellular, or microfollicular, or follicular or had open follicles, etc.; there was one cellular ascites tumor subline. Other observations were made of vascular patterns, connective tissue, necrosis, and metastases.
- Published
- 1999
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10. Thyroid radioiodide transport: models, rate-limiting steps, and relation to formation of iodoprotein.
- Author
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Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Biological Transport, Iodine Radioisotopes, Models, Biological, Iodides metabolism, Iodoproteins biosynthesis, Thyroid Gland metabolism
- Published
- 1995
11. Kinetics of equilibration of radioiodide in individual mouse thyroid follicles in vivo.
- Author
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Andros G and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Autoradiography, Biological Transport, Densitometry methods, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium metabolism, Iodides blood, Iodine Radioisotopes, Kinetics, Mice, Mice, Inbred C3H, Models, Biological, Osmolar Concentration, Thiouracil pharmacology, Thyroid Gland cytology, Iodides pharmacokinetics, Thyroid Gland metabolism
- Abstract
Microdensitometric measurements were made on autoradiographs of radioiodide localized in mouse thyroids subjected to various degrees of stimulation, in which the formation of organic radioiodide was acutely blocked. Estimates were made of the relative concentrations of radioiodide in lumens and cells of follicles and in the nearby blood vessels. Simple models were introduced to interpret the data. Analysis of the ratio of radioiodide concentrations in the lumen and cells of follicles as a function of follicles size and time after injection indicated that smaller follicles equilibrated faster than larger follicles, that the equilibration was faster the more active the gland was, and that the release of radioiodide from follicles in the less active glands must be characterized by a time-dependent exit rate constant. Analysis of the relative concentration of luminal radioiodide as a function of follicle size at short time intervals and in the steady state indicated that the transport properties of the average epithelial cell were generally independent of follicle size.
- Published
- 1991
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12. Comparison of a special class of epithelial cells in hyperplastic thyroids undergoing involution and in thyroids in hypophysectomized rats.
- Author
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Tachiwaki O and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Epithelium pathology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia pathology, Hypophysectomy, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
In male Fischer rats, a class of follicles with flat epithelium is present as a minor component of thyroid glands in which most of the follicles have cuboidal epithelium. These follicles occur in thyroids that have been made hyperplastic by feeding the rats thiouracil for 21 days and then allowing involution for 21 days or more. They also occur in older control rats. The follicles resemble in morphology, at the light-microscope level, the so-called "cold" follicles that occur in aged mice. We have examined the ultrastructure of the flat cells in these follicles and compared it with that of the flat cells occurring in the thyroid follicles of hypophysectomized rats. The cells in involution have abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and few lysosomes and, in these respects, differ markedly from cells in hypophysectomized rats. The follicles with flat cells are surrounded by a normal incidence of blood capillaries, so that the cells do not appear to be deprived of access to an adequate supply of materials necessary to satisfy their metabolic requirements. Their abundant RER suggests that they have thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) receptors, so that the flat cell may be the result of some process occurring at a step distal to receptor coupling with TSH. Their occurrence in young rats after the induction of hyperplasia may be a consequence of cell multiplication producing a clone of neighboring abnormal cells that have an abnormally small cell height.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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13. Ultrastructural changes in thyroid epithelium during involution of the hyperplastic thyroid gland.
- Author
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Tachiwaki O, Zeligs JD, and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Endocytosis, Epithelium pathology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia pathology, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Organelles pathology, Organelles ultrastructure, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Thyroglobulin biosynthesis, Thyroglobulin metabolism, Thyroid Gland pathology, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Abstract
The ultrastructure of the thyroid epithelial cell was examined at various time intervals after induction of involution of the hyperplastic thyroid gland. Thyroids were made hyperplastic by the feeding of thiouracil in a Remington low-iodine diet to male Fischer rats for 3 weeks. Involution was induced by replacing the thiouracil-containing diet with Purina Laboratory Chow, a high-iodine diet. During involution, organelles that play a role in the synthesis and secretion of thyroglobulin, such as the rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and apical vesicles, were well preserved and prominent features of the epithelial cell. The apical plasma membrane of many cells was highly irregular for approximately 2 weeks with signs suggesting rapid discharge of apical-vesical contents into the lumen of the follicle. Pseudopods and colloid droplets were present but were not very prominent features of the cell. No signs of extensive autophagy or obvious increased incidence of lysosomes were present, although there was an elevation in the incidence of small dense bodies starting about day 8, and prominent by 15 days. Some of these may be phagosomes formed from luminal debris. The observations indicate that involution of the hyperplastic thyroid in which there is maintenance of the protein synthetic apparatus and little sign of autophagy or death of the epithelial cells is remarkably different from phenomena occurring during involution of prostate or mammary glands.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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14. Histologic changes in tissue components of the hyperplastic thyroid gland during its involution in the rat.
- Author
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Wollman SH, Herveg JP, and Tachiwaki O
- Subjects
- Animals, Capillaries pathology, Hyperplasia pathology, Hyperplasia physiopathology, Leukocytes pathology, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Thyroid Gland physiopathology, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
Male Fischer rats were fed a low-iodine diet containing thiouracil for 21 days to produce hyperplastic thyroid glands, and then fed a high-iodine diet for various time intervals, from 5 hr to 180 days, in order to study the morphological changes that occur during involution. Thyroids were fixed by perfusion fixation and embedded in Epon. Sections were examined by light microscopy. Initially at 0 days of involution (at the time of the change to the high-iodine diet), follicular lumens were very narrow and capillary lumens were very wide. The capsule was thick and infiltrated with mononuclear leukocytes. No obvious changes occurred for 1 day after the change in diet, but shortly thereafter capillary lumens began to narrow. By 4 days, most capillary lumens were close to normal size; capillaries formed a more or less normal bed except that many were embedded in a relatively thick or wide interfollicular matrix. This matrix was largely gone by 21 days. Between 1 and 21 days, follicular lumens dilated progressively as colloid accumulated. The density of staining of the accumulated colloid varied from follicle to follicle, and this variation was also observed in older controls. Inflammatory cells gradually disappeared from the capsule and most were gone by 15 days. Starting at approximately 15 days and continuing to 180 days, one or more disintegrating cells were found in some lumen profiles. Colloid goiters were not observed in these rats even after several months of involution. Some lumens were rather large, however, and small fractions of the follicles, both small and large, were bounded by flat cells and resembled "cold" follicles morphologically.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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15. Ultrastructure of intermediate stages in polarity reversal of thyroid epithelium in follicles in suspension culture.
- Author
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Nitsch L and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Differentiation, Cells, Cultured, Cytoplasm ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Microscopy, Electron, Rats, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
Separated thyroid follicles can be maintained in suspension culture in Coon's modified F-12 medium in 0.5% calf serum. If the serum concentration is raised to 5%, the follicles undergo inversion in 3-5 d. During the process of inversion, epithelial cells can be observed in intermediate stages of polarity reversal. The earliest ultrastructural changes recognized are surface changes in which tight junctions and microvilli appear at the lateral margins of the cell near the medium. Later, changes in the distribution of intracellular organelles occur. The Golgi apparatus shifts towards the end of the cell facing the medium, and lysosomes shift toward the luminal end of the cell. The right junctions and microvilli at the luminal end of the cell disappear sometime after the cytoplasmic organelles rearrange. The luminal colloid disappears only after the surface changes (loss of tight junctions and microvilli) occur at the luminal end of the cell. There appears to be some regulation of the order in which changes occur during polarity reversal of the thyroid epithelial cell.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
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16. Mitosis in rat thyroid epithelial cells in vivo. IV. Cell surface changes.
- Author
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Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Cell Membrane physiology, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Epithelium physiology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Microvilli ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Mitosis, Thyroid Gland physiology
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
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17. Thyrotropin preparations are mitogenic for thyroid epithelial cells in follicles in suspension culture.
- Author
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Nitsch L and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Autoradiography, Cell Division drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Cells, Cultured, DNA Replication drug effects, Epithelial Cells, Microscopy, Electron, Mitogens, Mitosis drug effects, Rats, Thyroid Gland cytology, Thyrotropin pharmacology
- Abstract
We have been investigating the extent to which separated thyroid follicles in suspension culture, free of endothelium and fibroblasts, have the properties of follicles in vivo. To test whether thyrotropin (TSH) can cause thyroid epithelial cells to undergo mitosis, preparations of follicles suspended in Coon's modified F-12 medium with 0.5% calf serum were incubated with 10 milliunits of impure or pure TSH per ml. Three results were obtained: (i) TSH preparations stimulated the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into cell nuclei; (ii) mitotic figures were induced and they had the same characteristic ultrastructural features as those observed in vivo; and (iii) the cell number doubled in the course of 3 days of exposure to TSH. The results suggest that TSH is a mitogen for the principal thyroid epithelial celland that other substances found in the usual impure TSH preparations are not necessary for the mitogenic activity. It can act in the absence of nonfollicular cells. The initial multiplication rates are similar to those in vivo. The cells do not have to spread to divide in contrast to the requirement for spreading in the case of fibroblasts.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
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18. Embedding in a collagen gel stabilizes the polarity of epithelial cells in thyroid follicles in suspension culture.
- Author
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Garbi C, Nitsch L, and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Basement Membrane ultrastructure, Blood, Cell Adhesion, Culture Media, Epithelial Cells, Gels, Male, Protein Denaturation, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Cells, Cultured cytology, Collagen pharmacology, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
Separated thyroid follicles are stable in suspension culture in Coon's modified Ham's F12 medium containing 0.5% calf serum. They resemble follicles in vivo except for the absence of a basal lamina. However, the epithelial cells reverse polarity and the follicles invert when the serum concentration is raised to 5%. A number of substances, especially components of extracellular matrix, were added to the medium to ascertain if they could stabilize the follicles against inversion in 5% serum. Cellular and plasma fibronectin, gelatin, heat-denatured collagen, methylcellulose and laminin did not stabilize. The addition to the medium of as little as 50 micrograms/ml of acid-soluble collagen prepared from calf skin or rat tail tendons resulted in the formation of small clouds of gel. Follicles embedded within the gel were stabilized. Follicles in the same dish but not embedded in the gel inverted. Stabilization was not specific for collagen, since follicles embedded in a plasma clot were also stabilized. A gel was not sufficient for stabilization, since embedding in an agarose gel did not stabilize. Ultrastructural studies indicate that adherence to a limited number of gelled fibers of collagen covering only a small fraction of the basal plasma membrane may be sufficient to stabilize and that a basal lamina formed in the presence of laminin but without added collagen does not stabilize.
- Published
- 1984
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19. Shedding of dense cell fragments into the follicular lumen early in involution of the hyperplastic thyroid gland.
- Author
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Tachiwaki O and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Diet, Endocytosis, Epithelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia, Iodine pharmacology, Male, Microvilli ultrastructure, Rats, Thiouracil pharmacology, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
Membrane-bounded fragments of thyroid epithelial cells are found in the lumen of the thyroid follicle at early stages of involution of the hyperplastic gland. To demonstrate this, thyroid glands were made hyperplastic by feeding rats a low iodine diet containing thiouracil for 3 weeks. Involution was induced by the feeding of a high iodine diet. Three types of dense cell fragments were observed in the lumen at its periphery within 5 hours after the change of diet: (1) single, relatively large fragments that contained vesicles occasionally, (2) a cluster of rounded fragments of relatively small size. Some of these had a narrow tail, and (3) elongated narrow fragments in a row parallel to the apical surface of one or more epithelial cells. The fragments are probably derived from the thyroid epithelial cells since no other cell types were generally present. By 14 hours the fragments were distributed randomly throughout the lumen. Fragments were no longer present by 12 days of involution in most follicles. Fragment formation may be a mechanism for disposal of excess plasma membrane deposited by exocytic vesicles during rapid secretion of thyroglobulin into the follicular lumen early in involution.
- Published
- 1982
20. Basal lamina formation on thyroid epithelia in separated follicles in suspension culture.
- Author
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Garbi C and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Basement Membrane physiology, Cells, Cultured, Collagen physiology, Laminin, Male, Rats, Extracellular Space physiology, Glycoproteins physiology, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
When thyroid follicles are isolated by collagenase treatment of minced thyroid lobes, the basal lamina around each follicle is removed. The basal lamina does not reform when follicles are cultured in suspension in Coon's modified Ham's F-12 medium containing, in addition, 0.5% calf serum, insulin, transferrin, and thyrotropin. We have added acid soluble collagen and/or laminin to see if they would result in the formation of a basal lamina. An extended basal lamina did not form when follicles were embedded in a gel formed from acid-soluble rat tendon collagen or from calf skin collagen when added at a concentration of 100 micrograms collagen/ml. However, laminin at a concentration of 5.1 micrograms/ml gave rise to short segments of a basal lamina within 30 min. At longer time intervals, the segments lengthened and covered the base of many cells, and were continuous across the gap between cells and across the mouth of a coated pit. Not all basal surfaces were covered, and no exposed apical surfaces with microvilli had a basal lamina. There was no obvious difference in the appearance of the basal lamina if collagen was added in addition to laminin, but collagen, in contact with the plasma membrane when added alone, was lifted off the membrane in the presence of the basal lamina. The basal lamina appeared denser if formed in the presence of 5% serum instead of 0.5%.
- Published
- 1982
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21. Microhemorrhage in the hyperplastic thyroid gland of the rat.
- Author
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Zeilgs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Epithelium ultrastructure, Erythrocytes immunology, Erythrocytes ultrastructure, Hemolysis, Hemorrhage etiology, Hyperplasia, Male, Rats, Thiouracil, Thyroid Diseases etiology, Time Factors, Hemorrhage pathology, Thyroid Diseases pathology
- Abstract
A microhemorrhagic process was consistently observed in association with the induction of thyroid hyperplasia by dietary thiouracil in the rat. This process appeared to involve the extravasation of erythrocytes (RBCs) through hyperplastic capillary walls. Those sites of extravasation which were directly visualized involved endothelial openings of less than 1 mu. These openings were surrounded by endothelial cytoplasm containing a dense fibrous material and were associated with RBC constriction during passage. Extravasated RBCs were most often noted singly or in small groups, either in columns between follicular epithelial cells or embedded amongst the basal epithelial infoldings. Occasionally, extravasated RBCs were also observed within follicular lumens. Extravasated RBCs were usually intact ultrastructurally, but occasionally an apparent hemolytic process was observed, both for RBCs embedded amongst epithelial cells and for those within follicular lumens. The nature and etiology of this microhemorrhagic process are considered in relation to the hypervascularity of the gland, the possibility of capillary wall alterations, the presence of endothelial cell mitoses, and the localization of the process.
- Published
- 1976
22. Site of iodination in hyperplastic thyroid glands deduced from autoradiographs.
- Author
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Wollman SH and Ekholm R
- Subjects
- Animals, Autoradiography, Histocytochemistry, Hyperplasia, Microscopy, Electron, Rats, Iodine Radioisotopes, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
We have tried to ascertain the site of iodination in the chronically stimulated, hyperplastic thyroid gland of rats. Rats were fed propylthiouracil in a commercial rat diet for 10 days. Then the diet was changed to a low iodine diet for 5 days. To label the gland, 10 mCi of 125I-iodide was injected into the left heart ventricle. Ten seconds later the animal was perfused through the left ventricle with a fixative solution containing a goitrogen to block further iodination, and stable iodide to help extract uncombined radioiodide. Electron microscopic autoradiographs prepared from the fixed thyroids show strong labeling over the lumen of the follicle and no consistent labeling of any other site or organelle. We conclude that the site of iodination in the chronically stimulated, hyperplastic thyroid is the follicular lumen, i.e. the same as that in the normal gland.
- Published
- 1981
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23. Ultrastructural aspects of capillary fusion during the development of thyroid hyperplasia.
- Author
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Ericson LE and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Platelets ultrastructure, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Collagen metabolism, Endothelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia chemically induced, Hyperplasia pathology, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Platelet Aggregation, Rats, Thiouracil, Capillaries ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
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24. Embryologic origin of the various epithelial cell types in the second kind of thyroid follicle in the C3H mouse.
- Author
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Wollman SH and Hilfer SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Epithelium ultrastructure, Mice, Mice, Inbred C3H anatomy & histology, Microscopy, Electron, Thyroid Gland cytology, Ultimobranchial Body embryology, Mice, Inbred C3H embryology, Thyroid Gland embryology
- Abstract
The thyroid gland of the C3H mouse is composed largely of the usual follicle but it also contains a second kind of follicle. To ascertain the embryologic origin of the cell types in each of these follicles, ventral pharyngeal outpocketings and ultimobranchial outpocketings were isolated (before they fused to form the thyroid gland) from the 12-day-old fetus of the C3H mouse. The outpocketings were implanted into different kidney capsules of adult C3H mice and were allowed to grow for several months. Transplants were then excised and examined by electron microscopy. The ventral contribution formed large aggregates of follicles and was recognized as a distinct bump on the surface of the kidney. It formed only typical thyroid ultimobranchial contribution usually formed only a small number of follicles, generally of small size. It was readily located because the follicles occurred next to a white plaque of bone or cartilage at the site of implantation. The ultimobranchial contribution formed follicles containing four cell types: a ciliated cell, a cell with abundant agranular reticulum, a cell with many free ribosomes and fiber and occasional hemidesmosomes, and the C cell which was the most frequent cell type. No typical thyroid epithelium was observed in the ultimobranchial transplant. These observations suggest that the C cell in the usual follicle is derived from the ultimobranchial contribution, and that the second kind of follicle is largely an ultimobranchial contribution but the typical thyroid epithelium in it is largely or entirely a ventral contribution.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
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25. Turnover of plasma membrane in thyroid epithelium and review of evidence for the role of micropinocytosis.
- Author
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Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Endocytosis, Epithelium metabolism, Cell Membrane metabolism, Pinocytosis, Thyroid Gland metabolism
- Published
- 1989
26. Accumulation and localization of radiocalcium in the rat thyroid gland.
- Author
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Haeberli A, Millar FK, and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Calcium analysis, Calcium Radioisotopes, Kinetics, Male, Models, Biological, Rats, Thyroid Gland analysis, Calcium metabolism, Thyroid Gland metabolism
- Abstract
To determine the rate of accumulation of radiocalcium (45Ca) in the thyroid gland, the concentration of radiocalcium was measured in the blood serum and thyroid gland at various time intervals up to 7 days after a single ip injection of 45Ca in rats. The ratio of the 45Ca concentration in thyroid gland to serum (T:S) increased with the time interval after injection. Thyroid activity was varied by hypophysectomy or by feeding a low iodine diet with or without added thiouracil. The more active the gland, the faster it equilibrated with the serum 45Ca and the less was the T:S in the steady state. The equilibration was much slower than for radioiodide, taking several days in normal control rats and hours in very active glands. Autoradiographs showed that the 45Ca concentration was higher in association with the follicular epithelium than with the follicular lumen at 1 h or less after injection. However, at 24 h, the concentration of 45Ca was higher in the lumen than elsewhere in the gland. To determine rate constants describing the equilibration, the data in the normal gland were fitted with a model that took account of the differing rates of equilibration in cell and lumen. The presence of calcium in the lumen indicates that each time the follicular epithelial cell endocytosed stored luminal colloid before secretion, it also took in an appreciable amount of calcium.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
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27. 3H-thymidine labeling of endothelial cells in thyroid arteries, veins, and lymphatics during thyroid stimulation.
- Author
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Smeds S and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Arteries metabolism, Endothelium metabolism, Endothelium physiology, Lymphatic System metabolism, Male, Mast Cells physiology, Mitosis, Rats, Thiouracil pharmacology, Thymidine metabolism, Thyroid Gland metabolism, Thyroid Gland physiology, Vasodilation, Thyroid Gland blood supply
- Published
- 1983
28. Lipolysis and blood capillary enlargement in adipose tissue pads on thyroids of rats fed thiouracil.
- Author
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Wollman SH, Herveg JP, and Smeds S
- Subjects
- Adipose Tissue pathology, Animals, Capillaries drug effects, Hyperplasia chemically induced, Male, Mitosis, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Thiouracil, Adipose Tissue blood supply, Lipolysis, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Published
- 1982
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29. Capillary endothelial cell multiplication in adipose tissue pads on the thyroid during the feeding of thiouracil.
- Author
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Smeds S and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Adipose Tissue cytology, Adipose Tissue drug effects, Animals, Capillaries cytology, Capillaries drug effects, DNA Replication drug effects, Endothelium drug effects, Endothelium physiology, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Thyroid Gland cytology, Thyroid Gland drug effects, Adipose Tissue blood supply, Capillaries physiology, Thiouracil pharmacology, Thyroid Gland blood supply
- Abstract
It has been reported that blood capillaries in adipose tissue pads on the upper and lower poles of the thyroid gland enlarge when Fischer rats are fed thiouracil (TU) in a low iodine diet. To test whether the enlargement is accompanied by proliferation of the endothelial cells, [3H]thymidine was injected into rats fed the TU-containing diet, and labeling of the endothelial cells was studied by autoradiography. Nuclear labeling of the capillary endothelial cells was observed in the mixed brown and white adipose tissue (BAT and WAT, respectively) pads on the thyroid. After a single pulse of [3H]thymidine, 10% of the nuclei were labeled at 10 days (the peak labeling), and labeling decreased thereafter. To test whether the adipose tissue was stimulated because of the poor nutritional quality of the low iodine diet, Purina Laboratory Chow (a nutritionally adequate diet) was tested and produced the same result. To test whether TU had a direct effect, 5 micrograms T4/100 g BW were given daily; there was then no response to the TU, suggesting that the effect was due to an elevated circulating concentration of TSH. The effect was generally restricted to the adipose tissue pads on the thyroid. There was no response in interscapular BAT, epididymal WAT, or sc WAT. However, there was a response in small clusters of adipocytes embedded in inguinal sc WAT. The results are consistent with the idea that the effects are directly or indirectly due to elevated circulating TSH levels.
- Published
- 1983
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30. Cell polarity and water transport in thyroid epithelial cells in separated follicles in suspension culture.
- Author
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Nitsch L and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Cells, Cultured, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium physiology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Microscopy, Electron, Thyroid Gland cytology, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Videotape Recording, Thyroid Gland physiology
- Abstract
Separated thyroid follicles maintained in suspension culture can be used to study the properties of thyroid epithelium in the virtual absence of other cell types and to study the effect of extracellular materials on the follicles. They can be prepared by enzymatic separation of thyroid into single cells followed by reaggregation of the epithelial cells and also by collagenase treatment of thyroids to release follicles and sheets of epithelia that can be separated from other materials by differential filtration. The follicles can exist with normal orientation or inverted (inside out). The follicles are inverted in the presence of high serum concentrations (5%) but can have normal orientation when embedded in a type I collagen gel, even at high serum concentrations. When normally oriented follicles invert, the polarity of the epithelial cells reverses while they are connected to neighbors. During inversion, bipolar cells are observed having microvilli-bearing surfaces at both lumen and medium. Inverted follicles can revert to normal orientation when embedded in collagen gel. Various functional properties of normally oriented follicles are similar to those of follicles in vitro. However, inverted follicles do not concentrate iodide, although they synthesize thyroglobulin and secrete it into the medium. Mutants are available in established cell lines. They have functional and organizational properties that differ from those of normal cells and demonstrate a lack of coupling between functional properties and organization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1987
31. Embryologic origin of various epithelial cell types in the thyroid gland of the rat.
- Author
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Wollman SH and Hilfer SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Autoradiography, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium embryology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland embryology, Thyroid Gland transplantation, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Transplantation, Homologous, Rats anatomy & histology, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
Ventral pharyngeal outpocketings and ultimobranchial outpocketings from the 14-day-old fetus of the Fischer rat were isolated before they fused to form thyroid glands. The outpocketings were implanted into different kidney capsules of adult male Fischer rats, and were allowed to grow for several months. Transplants were then excised and examined by electron microscopy. The ultimobranchial outpocketing gave rise to two types of follicles. One contained ciliated cells, cells with an abundant agranular reticulum, U cells with basal hemidesmosomes, and two types of cells with secretory vesicles. The other contained C cells separated from the follicular lumen by a single flat fiber-containing cell. The ventral outpocketing formed typical thyroid epithelium making up the usual thyroid follicles differing from follicles in the thyroid in situ by the absence of C cells. These follicles were functional as determined by autoradiographic studies with 125I but differed from thyroid follicles in situ with respect to size distribution. The results suggest that (1) in the adult thyroid gland the C cell in the usual follicle is an ultimobranchial contribution and (2) the so-called ultimobranchial follicle is ultimobranchial in origin but that the typical thyroid epithelium in mixed follicles of U cells and typical thyroid epithelium is a ventral contribution. The reason for the absence in the thyroid gland in situ of the variety of other cell types observed in ultimobranchial transplants is unknown.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Mitosis in thyroid follicular epithelial cells in vivo. III. Cytokinesis.
- Author
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Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Nucleus ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Male, Organoids ultrastructure, Phagocytosis, Rats, Thyroid Gland cytology, Mitosis, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Ultrastructure and some other properties of inverted thyroid follicles in suspension culture.
- Author
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Garbi C and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle blood, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Culture Media, Culture Techniques, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Epithelium ultrastructure, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Rats, Surface Properties, Cells, Cultured ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Change of inverted thyroid follicle into a spheroid after embedding in a collagen gel.
- Author
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Garbi C, Tacchetti C, and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Cell Movement, Collagen, Culture Techniques, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Gels, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Microscopy, Electron, Microvilli ultrastructure, Mitosis, Rats, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
When inverted thyroid follicles in suspension culture are embedded in a collagen gel, there is extensive reorganization of the follicle. To identify intermediate stages in the reorganization, a suspension of inverted follicles was mixed with a cold solution of collagen (0.1 mg/ml) in culture medium and the resultant was warmed and allowed to gel. Prior to embedding, the epithelial cells bounding the lumens formed a monolayer of attenuated cells with their microvilli-bearing surface in contact with the medium. The first change noted was a shrinkage of the lumen in many follicles by 18 h. The cells became cuboidal to columnar. Some of the cells had long sheet-like processes extending into the lumen in contact with those of other cells. In late stages of the reorganization, 48 h, the cells were arranged in a compact spheroid. The spheroids contained two different kinds of colloid-filled lumens, possibly of different origins, one a spherical microlumen, the other very long and narrow in section. The peripheral cells of the spheroid had a smooth plasma membrane (without microvilli) in contact with collagen. Although most of the cells in a section had a microvilli-bearing surface forming part of the boundary of a lumen, it is not certain that all cells were in contact with a lumen.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Ultrastructure of blebbing and phagocytosis of blebs by hyperplastic thyroid epithelial cells in vivo.
- Author
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Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium physiology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia, Male, Organoids ultrastructure, Pseudopodia physiology, Pseudopodia ultrastructure, Rats, Ribosomes ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland physiology, Phagocytosis, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Abstract
In addition to pseudopods, somewhat pleomorphic blebs were consistently found protruding from the apical surfaces of hyperplastic rat thyroid epithelial cells into the follicular lumens in vivo. Many blebs were knobby, roughly hemispherical protrusions, with a diameter of 2-3 mum. Such blebs had a densely packed microfilamentous core and contained numerous apparent ribosomes. They were morphologically similar to blebs that have been observed in a variety of cultured cells. Other blebs were larger, more elongate, and less knobby, but had a similar ultrastructural organization. Blebs of all sizes appeared to be phagocytosed on some occasions by nearby epithelial cells. The phagocytic process involved partial engulfment of the bleb by a typical epithelial pseudopod, followed by an apparent pinching-off process, presumably resulting in the separation of the bleb from its cells or origin. The pinching-off process was associated with a band of approx. 6-nm diameter microfilaments that developed within the pseudopod cytoplasm surrounding the base of the bleb and is postulated to function as a contractile ring. The finding of blebbing is an intact tissue in vivo indicates that this phenomenon is not restricted to cultured cells, and thus tends to extend the significance of in vitro observations of the process. In relation to their occurrence in the hyperplastic thyroid gland in vivo, possible interconversions are considered between different types of blebs, and between blebs and pseudopods.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Ultrastructure of cytokinesis in blood capillary endothelial cells in thyroid gland in vivo.
- Author
-
Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Capillaries ultrastructure, Cell Division drug effects, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Cytoplasm ultrastructure, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Endothelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia chemically induced, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Kinetics, Male, Microvilli ultrastructure, Rats, Telophase, Thiouracil pharmacology, Thyroid Gland cytology, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Endothelium cytology, Thyroid Gland blood supply
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Thyroid capsule changes during the development of thyroid hyperplasia in the rat.
- Author
-
Wollman SH and Herveg JP
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Vessels pathology, Connective Tissue pathology, Fibroblasts, Hyperplasia, Leukocytes, Lymphatic System pathology, Male, Rats, Thiouracil, Thyroid Diseases chemically induced, Thyroid Gland blood supply, Thyroid Diseases pathology, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
Young adult male Fischer rats were fed 0.25% thouracil in a low-iodine diet to produce hyperplasia of the thyroid gland. The capsule of the thyroid gland increased in thickness from approximately one cell in controls to a substantial multilayered structure. Increase in capsule thickness was noted by 3 days. The cell population of the capsule was largely fibroblasts, but during a period within the interval from 14 to 28 days, the capsule tended to be exceptionally thick and contained many mononuclear leukocytes. At later times the capsule was not quite as thick and the leukocytes largely disapproved. Capillaries developed in the capsule probably by sprouting. The capsule growth was so extensive that certain neighboring tissues were often incorporated into the capsule, including arteries, veins, nerves, striated muscle, and lymph nodes. There was some regional specificity in the development of capsular hyperplasia. Connective tissue increased around the thyroid and parathyroid glands but not between them. Connective tissue in partitions with the thyroid gland also increased in thickness, although the extent of accumulation of cells and intercellular matrix was much less than in the capsule.
- Published
- 1978
38. Blood capillary enlargement during the development of thyroid hyperplasia in the rat.
- Author
-
Wollman SH, Herveg JP, Zeligs JD, and Ericson LE
- Subjects
- Animals, Hyperplasia, Male, Rats, Thiouracil, Thyroid Gland blood supply, Capillaries pathology, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
To study blood capillary growth in the hyperplastic thyroid gland, rats were fed 0.25% thiouracil in a low iodine diet for time intervals up to 100 days. Thyroids were fixed by vascular perfusion and embeded in Epon. Whole lobes were sectioned from pole to pole and slides were prepared of sections every 0.3 mm. Capillaries were clearly enlarged by 3 days and they enlarged progressively thereafter. By 3 days, the cells of many neighboring capillaries came into close apposition and from this time on, there was evidence of fusion of capillary walls in the form of partial septa in the capillary lumens. Fusion continued until 20 days, when follicles were almost completely surrounded by a continuous endothelial sheet and unfused capillary walls were separated by connective tissue. The vascular pattern around peripheral follicles changed in a way similar to interior follicles, except that in places, capillaries were gradually excluded from the space between epithelium and thyroid capsule. Vascular enlargement was restricted to the thyroid blood vessels. There was no obvious enlargement of the blood capillaries of the parathyroid despite its close proximity to the thyroid.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Sudden volume changes of the lumen of inverted thyroid follicles in suspension cultures. Use in estimation of rates of water flux through thyroid epithelium.
- Author
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Nitsch L and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Culture Techniques, Kinetics, Male, Rats, Thyroid Gland metabolism, Extracellular Space metabolism, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
Inverted thyroid follicles in suspension culture were observed using dark-field illumination and time-lapse video enhancement techniques. The lumens of many follicles undergo episodes of rapid shrinkage followed by relatively slow dilation. The extent of shrinkage ranged from 10 to 40% of the initial diameter. The decrease in lumen diameter is accompanied by loss of luminal fluid. The rate of efflux of fluid amounted to from 1 to 90 microns3/micron2 of luminal surface/min. This was followed after several minutes by a slow and generally linear increase in lumen diameter with time that could be accounted for by an influx of fluid of the order of 0.5 micron3/micron2/min. It is possible that this phenomenon is due to a continued influx of fluid into the lumen until a junction opens between cells allowing a sudden loss of luminal fluid. The junction reseals and fluid begins to accumulate in the lumen. The phenomenon may be a three-dimensional analogue of the behavior of domes.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Gap junctions in thyroid epithelium of the rat.
- Author
-
Tice LW, Carter RC, and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Male, Rats, Intercellular Junctions, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Abstract
Gap junctions were observed on the lateral plasma membrane of the typical thyroid epithelial cell in freeze-fracture preparations of rat thyroid gland. The gap junctions were 0.1 to 0.4 mum in diameter and were composed of closely packed, approximately 80 nm particles. They were located from 1 to 6 mum from the apical surface of the cell.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Ultrastructural localization of peroxidase on pseudopods and other structures of the typical thyroid epithelial cell.
- Author
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Tice LW and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane enzymology, Histocytochemistry, Hypophysectomy, Male, Microbodies, Microscopy, Electron, Microscopy, Phase-Contrast, Rats, Thyroid Gland cytology, Thyroid Gland drug effects, Thyrotropin pharmacology, Peroxidases analysis, Thyroid Gland enzymology
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Mitosis in rat thyroid epithelial cells in vivo. I. Ultrastructural changes in cytoplasmic organelles during the mitotic cycle.
- Author
-
Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Endoplasmic Reticulum ultrastructure, Epithelium ultrastructure, Golgi Apparatus ultrastructure, Lysosomes ultrastructure, Nuclear Envelope ultrastructure, Organoids ultrastructure, Rats, Thyroglobulin, Mitosis, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Mitosis in thyroid epithelial cells in vivo. V. Characteristic apical protrusions are associated with mitosis in unstimulated glands.
- Author
-
Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Aging, Anaphase, Animals, Animals, Newborn anatomy & histology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Interphase, Metaphase, Microscopy, Electron, Rats, Telophase, Mitosis, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Changes in tight junctions of thyroid epithelium with changes in thyroid activity.
- Author
-
Tice LW, Wollman SH, and Carter RC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Freeze Fracturing, Hypophysectomy, Intercellular Junctions drug effects, Male, Rats, Thiouracil pharmacology, Thyrotropin pharmacology, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Abstract
The morphology of the tight junction of rat thyroid epithelium was examined in freeze-fractured material fixed in glutaraldehyde and briefly glycerinated. In normal thyroids the overall appearance of this junctional specialization resembled that of other cell types in many respects. Short-term changes in thyroid activity and hypophysectomy for 3 wk did not obviously affect the appearance of tight junctions. Feeding of the goitrogen, thiouracil, which stimulates secretion of thyroid-stimulating hormone, resulted in the appearance of some very narrow and some very wide, tight junctions or sometimes junctions with both wide and narrow regions within the same cell.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Association of mitochondria with desmosomes in the rat thyroid gland.
- Author
-
Bernstein LH and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Endoplasmic Reticulum ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Male, Rats, Desmosomes ultrastructure, Mitochondria ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A circumferential bundle of microfilaments associated with desmosomes near the apex of typical thyroid epithelial cells.
- Author
-
Bernstein LH and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Endoplasmic Reticulum ultrastructure, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Male, Mitochondria ultrastructure, Rats, Desmosomes ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Honeycomb structure of the apical surface of thyroid epithelium during involution of the hyperplastic thyroid gland.
- Author
-
Tachiwaki O and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Epithelium physiology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Hyperplasia, Intracellular Membranes ultrastructure, Male, Membrane Fusion, Microscopy, Electron, Microvilli ultrastructure, Pinocytosis, Rats, Thyroid Gland physiology, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland pathology
- Abstract
A heretofore undescribed feature consisting of closely packed pits 0.5-1 micron in diameter was observed on the apical surface of thyroid epithelial cells. The walls of the pits were generally smooth, except at the base where there was a high incidence of irregularities looking like sites of recent fusion of apical vesicles with the pits. The matrix of the partition between pits was similar to the matrix of pseudopods in these cells in being free of membrane-bounded organelles and containing a low concentration of ribosomes. The pits were observed early in the involution of the hyperplastic gland, most prominently between 14 h and 8 days of involution. This is a time when thyroglobulin is accumulating in follicular lumens and the apical end of the epithelial cells usually contains a high concentration of apical vesicles ordinarily considered to be exocytic in character. It is important to recognize the existence of this feature to avoid confusing profiles of it with structures involved in macropinocytosis.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Pseudopod behavior in hyperplastic thyroid follicles in vivo.
- Author
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Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Cytoplasm ultrastructure, Hyperplasia, Male, Phagocytosis, Pseudopodia physiopathology, Rats, Thyroid Gland pathology, Pseudopodia ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Mitosis in rat thyroid epithelial cells in vivo. II. Centrioles and pericentriolar material.
- Author
-
Zeligs JD and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Cycle, Centrioles physiology, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium ultrastructure, Interphase, Male, Movement, Rats, Telophase, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Time Factors, Centrioles ultrastructure, Mitosis, Organoids ultrastructure, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Suspension culture of separated follicles consisting of differentiated thyroid epithelial cells.
- Author
-
Nitsch L and Wollman SH
- Subjects
- Animals, Bucladesine pharmacology, Cell Adhesion, Cell Survival, Cells, Cultured, Epithelial Cells, Microbial Collagenase metabolism, Microscopy, Electron, Rats, Thyroid Gland ultrastructure, Thyrotropin pharmacology, Thyroid Gland cytology
- Abstract
We have prepared thyroid follicles in suspension culture to use as a model system in vitro for investigation of some properties of the thyroid gland. The follicles were free of endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and other nonepithelial cells. They were prepared by collagenase treatment of minced rat thyroid glands followed by differential filtration of the suspension through nylon meshes. Small clusters of principal thyroid epithelial cells were separated from large fragments and single cells. They were cultured in dilute suspension in Coon's modified F-12 medium in dishes coated with agarose to avoid having the cells attach to the dishes. By culture day 3, most of the clusters formed closed follicles containing a periodic acid-Schiff-positive colloid but without a basal lamina. Follicle walls contained an occasional C cell. The epithelium resembled that in the thyroid of a recently hypophysectomized rat, with normal polarity and organelle complement normal with respect to position and abundance, with basally located lysosomes, no pseudopods, and no colloid droplets. The cells were responsive to thyroid-stimulating hormone (thyrotropin) and to dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Thyroid-stimulating hormone at 10 munits/ml resulted in apical migration of lysosomes and formation of pseudopods and colloid droplets within 30 min; longer exposure resulted in depletion of luminal colloid. The results indicate that the suspended follicles resemble follicles in vivo with respect to morphology and responsiveness to thyroid-stimulating hormone in the absence of other cell types.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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