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. 1987 Mar;247(3):555-64.
doi: 10.1007/BF00215749.

Distribution and fine structure of ependymal cells possessing intracellular cysts in the aqueductal wall of the rat brain

Distribution and fine structure of ependymal cells possessing intracellular cysts in the aqueductal wall of the rat brain

T Fukuda et al. Cell Tissue Res. 1987 Mar.

Abstract

The wall of the cerebral aqueduct was examined in 20 male rats at the light- and electron-microscopic levels. Disorder in ciliary orientation was occasionally seen in ordinary ependymal cells. Ependymal cells possessing intracellular cysts of 5 to 30 micron in diameter were observed within and beneath the aqueductal ependyma in all animals examined. Light-microscopic reconstruction from serial, 10-micron thick frontal sections revealed an extensive distribution of cystic ependymal cells (CECs), especially along the ependymal ridges in the rostral half of the aqueduct, and along the dorsal region of the aqueductal lining in the caudal half. Both cystic and surface membranes of CECs bore microvilli and cilia. Ectopic ependymal cells (EECs) characterized by densely packed microvilli, well-developed intermediate junctions and cilia, but without cysts, were situated in the subependymal region adjacent to a CEC or another EEC. The ependymal ridges were long, narrow and sporadically stratified ependymal linings extending rostrocaudally and bilaterally along the aqueductal surface. Tanycyte-like cells filled the surface region of the ridge, and CECs and EECs were frequently seen in the core. Intraventricularly injected microperoxidase was detected among densely packed microvilli but not in the cystic lumina of CECs, indicating that EECs and CECs are distinct entities.

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