CHANGES IN INTESTINAL CELL KINETICS IN THE SMALL INTESTINE OF LACTATING MICE

Abstract
The enlargement of the small intestine of mice during lactation is due, at least in part, to hyperplasia in the mucosal crypts and villi. The number of cells per crypt increases by 130% and the cell production rate by 63% after 15 days of lactation. These parameters were measured from crypt squashes and sections using both double-label and PLM techniques. Neither the numbers of crypts and villi in the small intestine nor the turnover time of post-mitotic cells on the villi changed. A number of factors appear to act in concert during lactation to trigger this increase in epithelial cell number in the small intestine. The experiments reported suggest a role for the increased quantity of food consumed by the lactating animal, for changing hormonal levels, and for the increased demands placed on the body by milk production.
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