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. 1981;71(1):67-80.
doi: 10.1007/BF00592571.

Correlative immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies: identification of (entero)glucagon- somatostatin- and pancreatic polypeptide-like-containing cells in the human colon

Correlative immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies: identification of (entero)glucagon- somatostatin- and pancreatic polypeptide-like-containing cells in the human colon

T Lehy et al. Histochemistry. 1981.

Abstract

Correlative immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies, using the semi thin-thin technic, were performed to identify the (entero) glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide-like immunoreactive cells of the human colonic mucosa. Mean granule diameter for each cell type was estimated according to two methods and histograms showing the granule size distribution were constructed. A total of 139 immunostained cells identified at the ultrastructural level were analyzed. Mean granule diameter for (entero)glucagon-containing cells was 318 +/- 11 nm but a reduction of granule size with age was noteworthy: granules were larger in the fetus (mean diameter 350 +/- 15) than in adults (mean diameter 310 +/- 10 nm). Somatostatin-containing cells, very rare in adults, were present in the fetal distal colon. Their general mean granule diameter was 354 +/- 18 nm but many cells had a mean granule diameter of more than 400 nm. A pancreatic polypeptide-like immunoreactivity was found only in (entero)glucagon-containing cells, pointing out the possible occurrence of both peptides (or of similar sequences) in the same cells. Previous ultrastructural studies dealing with a tentative classification of the human colonic endocrine cells were compared with the present data.

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