Gap junction channels which are responsible for direct intercellular communication are composed of connexin proteins. Different connexins are distributed in a tissue-specific manner. Up to now only connexin26 has been identified to be widely expressed in the inner ear. In order to investigate the role of additional gap junction proteins, the expression of connexin30 and 43 was investigated in the rat cochlea. Connexin26 and connexin30 were both expressed in the spiral limbus, the spiral ligament, the stria vascularis and between supporting cells of the organ of Corti. Double-labeling experiments suggest that both connexins are partly colocalized between cells. Weak staining of connexin43 could only be detected in the stria vascularis, the spiral ligament and between organ of Corti supporting cells. The corresponding transcripts for connexin26, 30 and 43 could be detected by Northern blot analysis. The expression of different gap junction channels in the cochlea suggests functional diversity. Gap junctions in the inner ear may control ion concentrations of cochlear fluids or act as conduits through which glucose and other metabolites diffuse.
Apoptosis is involved in morphogenesis of embryonic tissues as well as in homeostasis of adult organs and tissues. It is the main process by which organs maintain cell mass and at the same time eliminate excess and aged cells that have lost their functional importance. The typical morphological signs of apoptosis (cellular shrinkage, membrane blebbing, nuclear condensation and fragmentation) are the final results of a complex biochemical cascade of events, some of which are inextricably linked to the process of differentiation. Studies that analyze all stages of this cascade, rather than the final morphological stages of apoptotic death, are essential in order that specific link(s) between differentiation and apoptosis are appreciated. This review outlines the main stages of the apoptosis cascade together with current methods for their morphological visualization. Starting with (a) receptors and ligands known to induce apoptosis, we continue with (b) early initiator stages of apoptosis, and (c) proteins regulating and potentially inhibiting further progression of the cascade, into (d) irreversible execution stages of the cascade, and finally (d) the morphological events of apoptotic death. For each stage we present those aspects of the biochemical background that are morphologically relevant, together with proven methods for their visualization. We offer technical advice at each stage based upon our experience of studying differentiation and apoptosis in human placental trophoblast.
The invasion of extravillous trophoblast cells into the maternal endometrium is one of the key events in human placentation. The ability of these cells to infiltrate the uterine wall and to anchor the placenta to it as well as their ability to infiltrate and to adjust utero-placental vessels to pregnancy depends, among other things, on their ability to secrete enzymes that degrade the extracellular matrix. Most of the latter enzymes belong to the family of matrix metalloproteinases. Their activity is regulated by the tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases. We have studied the distribution patterns of matrix metalloproteinases-1, -2, -3, and -9 and their inhibitors TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 as compared to the distribution of their substrates along the invasive pathway of extravillous trophoblast of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimester placentas by means of light microscopy on paraffin and cryostat sections as well as at the ultrastructural level (only 3rd trimester placenta). The comparison of different methods proved to be necessary, since the immunohistochemical distribution patterns of these soluble enzymes are considerably influenced by the pretreatment of tissues. All three methods revealed immunoreactivities of both, proteinases and their inhibitors, not only intracellularly in the extravillous trophoblast but also extracellularly in its surrounding matrix, the distribution patterns depending on the stage of pregnancy and on the degree of differentiation of trophoblast cells along their invasive pathway. Within the extracellular matrix, immunolocalization of matrix metalloproteinases as well as their inhibitors showed a specific relation to certain extracellular matrix molecules.
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