1. The pituitary gland of the coelacanth fish Latimeria chalumnae Smith: General structure and adenohypophysial cell types
- Author
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J. A. M. van Kemenade and J. W. Kremers
- Subjects
Inclusion Bodies ,Pituitary stalk ,Pituitary gland ,Histology ,Cerebrum ,Latimeria ,Fishes ,Pars intermedia ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biological Evolution ,Adenohypophysial Cell ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pituitary Gland, Posterior ,Pituitary Gland, Anterior ,Pituitary Gland ,medicine ,Animals ,Female ,Duct (anatomy) ,Phylogeny ,Acidophil cell - Abstract
The pituitary gland of Latimeria chalumnae is situated rostroventral to the telencephalon. The hollow pituitary stalk is bent forward and is ventrally connected to a saccus-vasculosus-like organ, rostrally to a neurointermediate lobe. The infundibular lumen protrudes far into the neurohypophysial lobules. The elongated principal part (pars cerebralis) of the pars distalis is partly embedded in a dorsal depression of the pars intermedia and caudally invaded by the neurohypophysis. It may be divided into rostral and proximal pars distalis and includes a ramified hypophysial cleft, which continues rostrally as a duct with adjacent islets of pars distalis tissue (parts of a pars buccalis). The adenohypophysis consists of cell cords and follicles. Eight tinctorial cell types can be distinguished: in the rostral islets: large basophils with acidophil globules, in the rostral pars distalis: small basophils, large basophils with amphiphil characters and erythrosin-, orange G-positive acidophils; in the proximal pars distalis: orange G-positive acidophils and small and large basophils, having similar staining properties; in the pars intermedia: one amphiphil cell type.
- Published
- 1975
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