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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 278: G871-G877, 2000;
0193-1857/00 $5.00
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Vol. 278, Issue 6, G871-G877, June 2000

Salivary epidermal growth factor and intestinal adaptation in male and female mice

Lawrence E. Stern, Richard A. Falcone Jr., Christopher J. Kemp, Margaret C. Braun, Christopher R. Erwin, and Brad W. Warner

Division of Pediatric Surgery, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio 45229-3039

Salivary epidermal growth factor (sEGF) levels are increased in male mice after small bowel resection (SBR) and may be important during intestinal adaptation. Since males have greater sEGF than females, the influence of sex on postresection adaptation was tested. Females had lower sEGF; however, sEGF substantially increased in both sexes after a massive (50%) SBR. Adaptive increases in DNA and protein content, villus height, and crypt depth, as well as crypt cell proliferation rates in the remnant ileum, were not different between males and females. Although significant postresection increases in sEGF were identified, EGF mRNA and protein did not change within the submandibular gland. Glandular kallikrein-13 and ileal EGF receptor expression were greater after SBR in female mice. Intestinal adaptation is equivalent in female and male mice after SBR. Despite lower sEGF, females demonstrated increased expression of a kallikrein responsible for sEGF precursor cleavage as well as amplified ileal EGF receptor expression. These results endorse an important differential response between sexes regarding sEGF mobilization and intestinal receptor availability during adaptation.

small bowel resection; kallikrein; salivary gland


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