Ultrastructural Histochemical Studies of Secretory Processes in Rat Submandibular Granular Tubules During Intermittent Sympathetic Nerve Stimulation

Author: Thomopoulos George N.   Garrett John R.   Proctor Gordon B.  

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing Ltd

ISSN: 0924-3860

Source: European Journal of Morphology, Vol.38, Iss.2, 2000-04, pp. : 69-79

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Abstract

Secretory changes in the cells of granular tubules in rat submandibular glands have been studied sequentially during electrical stimulation of their sympathetic nerves. Results were assessed in a series of biopsied lobes from the same gland, taken at different times during the sympathetic stimulation. Changes were not synchronous between adjacent cells and it appeared that the time for the onset of secretory events differed between cells but, once set in action, a chain of similar events occurred. Nevertheless, some cells appeared to remain refractory throughout. Initially, some alignment of granules to the adjacent plasma membrane occurred and occasional evidence for classical exocytosis was seen. However, from early on microvesicles appeared in more luminally located granule membranes and were associated with granule fusions, that became common and led to the formation of large irregular aggregates. Most of the secretion of granule contents appeared to be through openings of aggregates into lumina. With granule fusions the intra-membrane microvesicles became internalised and tended to increase in size with time; they were commonly expelled with the contents of the aggregates. Fragments of cytoplasm also became incorporated in aggregate formation. Cytoplasm, often containing glycogen, also formed luminal blebs over some granular tubule cells and appeared to pass into the secretion by an apocrine process. At the end of stimulation multivesicular bodies were seen in association with redundant aggregates.

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