Abstract

We used the nude mouse tumour xenograft model to study the pathogenesis of mucosa alterations in the large bowel surrounding a carcinoma. In mouse colonic mucosa overlying HT-29 colonic carcinoma xenografts in the caecum, the crypts were elongated in comparison with those in distant mucosa and also frequently showed a shift towards sialomucin production. These features, which are comparable with socalled transitional mucosa (TM) in man, were absent in control animals inoculated with Indian Ink instead of HT-29 cells. Although the localization of the proliferative cell compartment in mouse colonic mucosa overlying HT-29 xenografts appeared to be confined to the lower half of the crypt as in normal mucosa, the relative length of the DNA synthesizing cell compartment along the crypts was slightly elongated. These data strongly suggest that TM should be regarded as a secondary phenomenon rather than a premalignant change in large intestinal epithelium and that higher proliferative activity of epithelial cells contributes little to the elongation of crypts in TM.

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