Back to Search Start Over

Ultrastructural Study on the Epithelial Responses against Attachment of Indigenous Bacteria to Epithelial Membranes in Peyer's Pathes of Rat Small Intestine

Authors :
Katsuhiko Warita
Tetsurou Inamoto
Junichi Kawano
Nobuhiko Hoshi
Wang-Mei Qi
Toshifumi Yokoyama
Hiroshi Kitagawa
Yuko Kawata
Kenkichi Yamamoto
Source :
Journal of Veterinary Medical Science. 70:235-241
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Japanese Society of Veterinary Science, 2008.

Abstract

The ultrastructure of epithelial responses against the membrane adhesion of indigenous bacteria was investigated in the follicle-associated epithelium (FAE) of rat small intestine. The most frequent adherence of the various morphological types of bacteria to the epithelial membranes was found at the apex of the FAE. The attachment sites were deeply invaginated, and their bottoms were deformed into a sharp cone shape. Four layers with different electron densities were formed just beneath the apical membranes by microfilaments which surrounded the invaginations. The electron density of each layer was gradually decreased as being apart from the invaginations. The extremities of some bacteria in the invaginations were deformed into sharpened shapes. The cell walls of the extremities of the bacteria were occasionally dissolved in the invaginations, and their cytoplasms were slightly swollen with low electron densities. In some invaginations, the attached bacteria were eliminated to leave their fragments such as filamentous debris and a part of cell walls. Finally these remnants disappeared completely. When the bacterial colonies existed in the middle region of the FAE, the attachment of bacteria resulted in the engulfment of bacteria by M cells. The degenerated bacteria whose cytoplasmic matrices were separated into high electron dense materials and cleared materials were occasionally engulfed by ordinary microvillous columnar epithelial cells or goblet cells throughout the FAE. These findings suggest that the epithelial cells reject the attachment of live indigenous bacteria and that the M cells absorb indigenous bacteria in rat Peyer's patches.

Details

ISSN :
13477439 and 09167250
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Veterinary Medical Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a39f186916306c9b1562fc3bd3a39d7