6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265c25

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Structural dissimilarities in different regions of the pineal gland of Pirbright white guinea-pigs.

D. JungLutz Vollrath

subject

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyLightKaryometryGuinea PigsBiologyPineal GlandHyperchromatic nucleiPinealocytePineal glandSpecies SpecificityInternal medicineFollicular phasemedicineAnimalsHumansBiological PsychiatryNeuronsGenetic VariationHistologyAnatomyWhite (mutation)Psychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)

description

In the present study, the proximal, intermediate and distal parts of dumbbell-shaped pineal glands of Pirbright White guinea-pigs were investigated with respect to structural dissimilarities. The most conspicuous difference was that while in the proximal part the pinealocytes were arranged in a random fashion, the intermediate and distal regions, except a small ventral area in the latter, exhibited a prominent follicular arrangement of the pinealocytes. Concretions were restricted to the subcapsular region of the intermediate part, whereas cells with hyperchromatic nuclei increased in number in an anterior-posterior direction. In males, pinealocyte nuclear size did not differ significantly in the regions investigated, whereas in females the karyometric results were much more heterogeneous. Exposure of male guinea-pigs to continuous illumination for 45 days resulted in (i) a 25% decrease of pineal volume, the intermediate area being relatively little affected, (ii) an increase in the number of follicles and (iii) a decrease in pinealocyte nuclear size, especially in a ventral zone of the proximal part of the pineal gland.

10.1007/bf01249285https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7108509