Pepsinogen Induction in Chick Stomach Epithelia by Reaggregated Proventricular Mesenchymal Cells In Vitro. (stomach/organ culture/pepsinogen/induction/epithelial-mesenchymal interaction)

Abstract
In vitro organ culture system which permits embryonic chick proventriculus (glandular stomach) to synthesize pepsinogen de novo was developed. Explants of the proventricular rudiment were cultured on Millipore filters in Medium 199 with Earle's salts supplemented with 50% 12-day embryo extract at 38°C in 95% air and 5% CO2. In these culture conditions, pepsinogen, a functional marker protein of proventriculus, was first detected after 3 days of cultivation of 6-day chick proventricular rudiment. When recombined and cultured with 6-day proventricular mesenchyme, 6-day oesophageal, proventricular or gizzard (muscular stomach) epithelium expressed pepsinogen while small intestinal epithelium did not. These results were consistent with the previous results obtained by chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) grafting, and showed that the culture conditions are permissive for pepsinogen expression. When recombined and cultured with reaggregated mesenchymal cells isolated from 6-day proventricular mesenchymal fragments, both 6-day proventricular and gizzard epithelia formed glandular structure and expressed pepsinogen. This indicates that the proventricular mesenchymal cells retain the ability to induce morphogenesis and cytodifferentiation of the proventricular epithelium even if the normal organization of proventricular mesenchyme is once destroyed.