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Spitzweg
Analysis of human sodium iodide symporter immunoreactivity in human exocrine glands.Spitzweg C, Joba W, Schriever K, Goellner JR, Morris JC, Heufelder AE. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1999 Nov;84(11):4178-84.
"The human sodium
iodide symporter (hNIS) is an intrinsic transmembrane protein
that mediates the active transport of iodide across the
basolateral membrane of thyroid follicular cells. In addition to
normally functioning thyroid tissue, various extrathyroidal
tissues, including salivary gland, lacrimal gland, gastric
mucosa, choroid plexus, and lactating mammary gland, have been
demonstrated to accumulate iodide. After cloning and molecular
characterization of the sodium iodide symporter, expression of
hNIS messenger ribonucleic acid has been detected in a broad
range of extrathyroidal tissues using Northern blot analysis and
RT-PCR. In this study we used both monoclonal and polyclonal
antibodies directed against different portions of hNIS protein
together with a highly sensitive immunostaining technique to
assess hNIS protein expression in tissue sections derived from
normal human salivary and lacrimal glands, pancreas, as well as
gastric and colonic mucosa. Immunohistochemical analysis of
normal human salivary and lacrimal glands revealed marked hNIS
immunoreactivity in ductal cells and less intense staining of
acinar cells. Further, immunostaining of gastric and colonic
mucosa showed marked hNIS immunoreactivity confined to chief and
parietal cells in gastric mucosa and to epithelial cells lining
mucosal crypts in colonic mucosa. In normal human pancreas, hNIS
immunoreactivity was located in ductal cells, exocrine
parenchymal cells, and Langerhans islet cells. In conclusion, our
study demonstrates the expression of hNIS protein by several
human exocrine glands, suggesting that iodide transport in these
glands is a specific property conferred by the expression of hNIS
protein, which may serve important functions by concentrating
iodine in glandular secretions." |
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