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. 1978 Mar;151(3):377-407.
doi: 10.1002/aja.1001510305.

Early postnatal development of ependyma in the third ventricle of male and female rats

Early postnatal development of ependyma in the third ventricle of male and female rats

R J Walsh et al. Am J Anat. 1978 Mar.

Abstract

Ependyma in the third ventricle of developing male and female rats (0, 5, and 10 days postpartum) were compared with those of sexually mature male rats by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). No sexual dimorphism appeared in the developmental group. At all ages the dorsolateral ventricular wall was composed of ciliated ependymal cells, while ependymal cells of the ventrolateral wall exhibited apical microvilli and bleb-like irregularities. While SEM revealed similarities in apical morphology between ependymal cells adult and developing animals, TEM revealed marked differences between these cells. Many ciliated ependymal cells in developing animals resembled those of the adult while other neonatal cell profiles suggested ciliogenesis. Adult male rats exhibited two distinct tanycyte populations. One population, characterized by elaborate intercellular interdigitations and basal processes containing predominantly fine filaments, occurred adjacent to the ventromedial nucleus (VMN). The second population, characterized by less extensive intercellular interdigitations and basal processes containing, primarily microtubules, lined the roof of the lateral recess adjacent to the arcuate nucleus. Many tanycytes at the level of the arcuate nucleus in developing rats resembled closely those of the adult. In contrast, developing ependymal cells at the level of the VMN differed differed from their adult counterparts in that they exhibited little intercellular interdigitation and projected basal processes characterized by an internal framework of microtubules. Similarities in cytology between developing and adult tanycytes of the arcuate region suggest that the adult function of this population may be operative in the early postnatal period. In contrast, the differing cytology between adult and developing tanycytes of the VMN region suggests that the function of these cells is age-dependent.

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