Abstract

Calf lungs were fixed with glutaraldehyde and examined by scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopy to compare the ultrastructure of Clara cells in terminal bronchioles of neonatal calves and older cattle. In the neonatal calf, SEM revealed numerous smooth-surfaced Clara cells protruding above a similar number of ciliated cells, whereas in older animals the surface of Clara cells was lobulated. Thin sections examined by TEM revealed numerous cuboidal to columnar Clara cells with indented nuclei and a pale cytoplasm filled with faintly granular glycogen in the neonatal calf. Some cells were characterized by apical dense and/or pale membrane-bound granules or secretory droplets. Many cells had an apical tubular network of cisternae that were partly smooth and partly decorated with ribosomes. Ultrastructural comparison of Clara cells in a 2-day-old calf with those of 14- and 19-day-old, 4- and 5. 5-month-old, and 3.5-year-old cattle revealed a striking reduction in the amount of glycogen per cell after 14 days. The number of cells with apical granules was small at all ages, and the density of the secretory granules varied greatly in different cells. A variable amount of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) was present but was less prominent than cisternae of ribosomal endoplasmic reticulum (RER). In older cattle, the limited amount of SER compared to the RER and secretory granules suggests that bovine Clara cells are more likely to be secretory than detoxifying.

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