
The mucous membrane of the first and second compartments (ventral regions) as well as of the third compartment of Lama guanacoe and Lama lamae stomach shows tubular glands opening into pits. Below the surface epithelium blood capillaries of the fenestrated type form a regular network, each mesh of which surrounds a gastric pit. From a morphological point of view (thin section and freeze-fracture replicas) the columnar cells of the surface epithelium and those of the pits closest to the capillaries are largely similar to the epithelial cells of the rabbit gallbladder. This similarity suggests that at the level of the columnar cells sodium-dependent water reabsorption occurs. This reabsorption has already been demonstrated in the abovementioned compartments by physiological methods. The surface and foveolae epithelial cells as well as some cells of the tubular glands have a secretory function. Their secretory granules contain mucosubstances, as indicated by light-(PAS- and Alcian blue reactions) and electron microscopic (PA-TCH-Ag-reaction) histochemistry. The secretory granules originate from the Golgi complex which shows a positive histochemical reaction in its innermost sacculi at the electron microscope level. Endocrine cells (s. second part of this investigation) are rare. The mucosal membrane of each muscular lip separating the glandular sacs in the first compartment shows a stratified, not keratinized, squamous epithelium.
Male, Muscles, Stomach, Ruminant, Golgi Apparatus, Membrane Proteins, Periodic Acid-Schiff Reaction, Epithelium, Absorption, Capillaries, Mitochondria, Muscle, Microscopy, Electron, Exocrine Glands, Gastric Mucosa, Animals, Camelids, New World, Artiodactyla
Male, Muscles, Stomach, Ruminant, Golgi Apparatus, Membrane Proteins, Periodic Acid-Schiff Reaction, Epithelium, Absorption, Capillaries, Mitochondria, Muscle, Microscopy, Electron, Exocrine Glands, Gastric Mucosa, Animals, Camelids, New World, Artiodactyla
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