Journal
ORGANOGENESIS
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages 199-205Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/org.25224
Keywords
parasympathetic innervation; salivary gland; innervation; neurturin; epithelial progenitors; cholinergic signaling
Funding
- Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, NIH, DHHS
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Our aim is to provide a summary of the field of salivary gland development and regeneration from the perspective of what is known about the function of nerves during these processes. The primary function of adult salivary glands is to produce and secrete saliva. Neuronal control of adult salivary gland function has been a focus of research ever since Pavlov's seminal experiments on salivation in dogs. Less is known about salivary gland innervation during development and how the developing nerves influence gland organogenesis and regeneration. Here, we will review what is known about the communication between the autonomic nervous system and the epithelium of the salivary glands during organogenesis. An important emerging theme is the instructive role of the nervous system on the epithelial stem/progenitor cells during development as well as regeneration after damage. We will provide a brief overview of the neuroanatomy of the salivary glands and discuss recent literature that begins to integrate neurobiology with epithelial organogenesis, which may provide paradigms for exploring these interactions in other organ systems.
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