Abstract

A stage-by-stage study of disturbances in enterocyte proliferation in the ileum and descending colon in the course of tumour induction by treatment with 1,2-dimethylhydrazine was performed. Even at early stages, an expansion of the zone of epithelial cell proliferation in the crypts and migration of dividing cells as far as to the crypt mouth, which is a manifestation of enterocyte differentiation disturbances, were observed. Enterocytes of the crypts chiefly proliferated through a short cycle, the mean duration of which was slightly greater than in normal intestinal tissue. The reduced cell loss in the epithelium and resultant disturbances of its steady state led to the accumulation of great numbers of atypical cells in the superficial layers of the crypts and formation of carcinomas in situ in the descending colon. The microscopically unaltered sections of the mucosa, prior to development of overt neoplastic changes carcinomas in situ, superficial cancers and small-size adenocarcinomas revealed a simplified structure of enterocyte population, as compared with normal epithelium. As tumours progressed, the heterogeneity of its component cell subpopulations increased, and several subpopulations, differing in mean duration of the mitotic cycle, were formed. Pathologic mitoses made up a greater portion (50-60 per cent) of the dividing cells of the descending colon, as compared with ordinary 4 per cent at all stages of experimental tumour induction.

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