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Coexistence of gastric‐ and intestinal‐type endocrine cells in gastric and intestinal mixed intestinal metaplasia of the human stomach
Author(s) -
Otsuka Takafumi,
Tsukamoto Tetsuya,
Mizoshita Tsutomu,
Inada Kenichi,
Takenaka Yoshiharu,
Kato Sosuke,
Yamamura Yoshitaka,
Miki Kazumasa,
Tatematsu Masae
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
pathology international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.73
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1440-1827
pISSN - 1320-5463
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1827.2005.01809.x
Subject(s) - enteroendocrine cell , gastrin , g cell , intestinal metaplasia , medicine , enterochromaffin like cell , gastric glands , biology , stomach , foveolar cell , gastric chief cell , endocrine system , endocrinology , somatostatin , metaplasia , gastric mucosa , pathology , secretion , hormone
Intestinal metaplasia (IM) in the human stomach has previously been classified into a gastric and intestinal mixed (GI‐IM) and a solely intestinal phenotype (I‐IM). The phenotypes of mucous and endocrine cells were evaluated in 3034 glandular ducts associated with chronic gastritis. In the pyloric region, the relative expression of gastric endocrine cell markers, such as gastrin and somatostatin, decreased gradually from glandular ducts with only gastric mucous cell phenotype (G type) to GI‐IM toward I‐IM, while that of the intestinal endocrine cell markers, glicentin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), and glucagon‐like peptide‐1 (GLP‐1) was inversely correlated. In the fundic region, gastrin‐positive cells emerged in the pseudo‐pyloric and GI‐IM glands, whereas I‐IM glands did not possess any gastrin‐positive cells, suggesting the presence of a distinct pathway of intestinalization. Double staining revealed coexistence of gastrin‐ and GLP‐1‐positive cells in the same gland and occasionally in the same cell in GI‐IM glands. These results suggest that the phenotypes of endocrine cells are in line with those for mucous counterparts and support the concept that all of the different types of mucous and endocrine cells in normal and IM glands might be derived from a single progenitor cell in each gland.