ISSN:
0002-9106
Keywords:
Life and Medical Sciences
;
Cell & Developmental Biology
Source:
Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
Topics:
Medicine
Notes:
Sublingual and submandibular glands were prepared for light and electron microscopy, and for histochemical staining with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), Alcian Blue (AB) or both (AB-PAS). Between 15 and 17 days post-conception, the sublingual gland undergoes active morphogenesis from a single, solid bud into a branched glandular tree. At 18 days the first overt signs of secretory differentiation appear in the formation of cells with three kinds of secretion granules; that is, electron-dense serous granules, empty-looking mucous granules with fine thread-like substructures, and granules which have the general appearance of mucous granules but also contain an internal, electron-dense core (“mixed” granules). During the period from 18 to 20 days, all three types of granulated cells increase in number, with mucous cells predominating, and they all border directly on the acinar lumina, in seemingly random combinations in different acini. This diversity is reflected in the histochemical staining, since most acini and cells are both PAS- and AB-positive, but a substantial minority stain only with PAS, indicating that they contain serous granules. By comparison, all secretory cells in the submandibular gland stain with PAS but not with AB after the initial appearance of secretory granules at 18 days. From 20 days to birth (at 22 days), the cells with mixed granules disappear, while the cells with serous granules become fewer in number and displaced to the peripheral outpocketings of the acini. As a result of these changes, the general organization in the newborn is similar to that in the adult, i.e., purely mucous acini with serous demilunes.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aja.1001530304
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