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. 1975 Jun;64(6):431-5.
doi: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12512402.

Movement of beta-irradiated epidermal basal cells to the spinous-granular layers in the absence of cell division

Free article

Movement of beta-irradiated epidermal basal cells to the spinous-granular layers in the absence of cell division

H Etoh et al. J Invest Dermatol. 1975 Jun.
Free article

Abstract

Guinea-pig epidermis was irradiated with 3000 rad of beta rays 1 hr after two injections of [3-H]thymidine 5 hr apart (labeled cells in S phase and G2 phase) or 18 hr after injection (labeled early G1 cells). In nonirradiated epidermis labeled basal cells divided within 24 hr with daughter cells remaining in the basal layer, and approximately 50% of the labeled cells moved into the spinal layer by the 3rd day. Cell division in nonirradiated epidermis diluted the number of silver grains/nucleus, and lightly labeled cells were found in the granular layer by day 7. Beta irradiation inhibited cell division but it did not slow the rate of transit (ca 8 days) of irradiated labeled cells from basal to granular layer, some of these remaining heavily labeled. Although cell division may play some role in upward movement of basal cells in normal epidermis detachment of a basal cell from the basement membrane and its transit to the granular layer is unimpaired in the absence of cell division. These findings suggest that some radioresistant metabolic function(s), not cell division, is responsible for upward movement of basal cells.

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