Abstract

The intrahepatic biliary passage in five species of birds was investigated with the transmission electron microscope. The avian liver was characterized by a frequent occurrence of intralobular bile ductules and canaliculo-ductular junctions in the parenchyma. It was further characterized by solitary bile ductular epithelial cells intercalated among hepatocytes surrounding bile canaliculi. The present study first revealed that avian bile ductular epithelial cells possess a long single cilium. Its basal body (distal centriole) was connected to a basal foot and slender rootlet and accompanied by a proximal centriole. The hepatocytes facing the bile passage possessed no cilium, although they frequently had a diplosome in their apical cytoplasm. The single cilia of the bile ductular epithelium gradually tapered toward the tip. The original fiber pattern in the most proximal part was peripheral 9 doublets +0. In the ciliary shaft, the doublets altered into singlets which were diminished in number gradually toward the distal parts of the shaft, so that in the tip only one singlet remained. Since these fiber patterns in the single cilia markedly deviated from the 9 + 2 fiber pattern of the ordinary motile cilia, they may not be motile, but properly regarded as sensory or chemoreceptors.

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