Interleukin (IL)-23 is an essential cytokine involved in expansion of the Th17 lineage, which is associated with many immune-related destructive tissue diseases. We hypothesized that the IL-23-induced Th17 pathway plays a role in periodontal pathology and examined the expression of cytokines, and related molecules, in periodontal lesions and control sites. IL-23 and IL-12 were expressed at significantly higher levels in periodontal lesions than in control sites. However, the relative expression of the IL-23 receptor compared with the IL-12 receptor beta2 was significantly higher in periodontal lesions. Moreover, IL-17 expression was significantly higher in periodontal lesions, especially in the tissue adjacent to bone destruction, than in control sites. There was no significant difference in the expression levels of IFN-gamma, an important cytokine inhibiting differentiation toward the Th17 pathway, between periodontal lesions and control sites. Together, these results suggest that the IL-23-induced Th17 pathway is stimulated in inflammatory periodontal lesions.
Oval cells that develop in the rat 2-acetylaminofluorene/ partial hepatectomy (AAF/PH) model express the c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase (KIT) and its ligand, stem cell factor (SCF). We investigated the role of the SCF/KIT system in the development of oval cells using Ws/Ws rats, whose c-kit kinase activity was severely impaired owing to a small deletion in the kinase domain. On days 7, 9, and 13 after PH in the AAF/PH model, the development Mature hepatocytes proliferate after partial hepatectomy (PH), resulting in regeneration of the liver. In contrast, if PH is performed under conditions in which the replication of mature hepatocytes is impaired, oval cells that are assumed to develop from hepatic stem cells located in the canal of Hering (biliary ductule) proliferate instead of mature hepatocytes and infiltrate into the surrounding parenchyma.
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