Abstract
Cells in the intra-articular disc of the temporomanadibular joint were studied ultrastructurally at three different ages to investigate any age changes. Rats aged 2, 15.5 months, and 2.5 years, and marmosets aged 21 months, 7 years, and between 10.5 and 14 years were studied. In the first two age groups of the rat and the first of the marmoset, the cells were generally rounded and had moderate amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum and other organelles associated with protein synthesis and secretion. Many cells had conspicuous amounts of microfilamentous material and cell membranes were closely applied to the collagen fibrils of the extracellular matrix. Occasionally, a narrow, irregular space containing microfilamentous material lay adjacent to the cell membrane. In the 2.5-year-old rats and the two older age groups of marmosets, cells with chondrocyte-like morphology were present. These cells were surrounded by a conspicuous pericellular matrix devoid of collagen fibrils and composed of microfilamentous material embedded in an amorphous ground substance. They resembled cells described in fibrocartilage from other sites, but differed from chondrocytes in hyaline cartilage by lacking a pericellular capsule. Thus, rats and marmosets both show cellular age changes in the intra-articular disc of the mandibular joint, which can be considered as changing from fibrous to fibrocartilaginous with age, a condition similar to that reported in humans.
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