Abstract

We have examined the distribution of calcium-binding proteins (CaBPs) in adult and fetal lungs of Syrian golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) using immunostaining with confocal laser microscopy and electron microscopy. Single and grouped (neuroepithelial body; NEB) endocrine cells were distributed from bronchi to alveolar ducts in the adult lung. Serial frozen sections immunostained for CaBPs in combination with immunostaining for endocrine markers such as calcitonin gene-related peptide, serotonin, PGP9.5, and synaptophysin revealed that positive immunostaining for calbindin-D28K (CB-D28K) was seen in single endocrine cells and NEBs. However, other so-called EF-hand family CaBPs, parvalbumin and calretinin, were not detected. Electron microscopically, positive immunoreaction for CB-D28K was mainly in the organelle-free cytoplasmic matrix of endocrine cells, and partly in nuclei and associated with secretory granules and endoplasmic reticulum. In fetal developing lungs, endocrine cells appeared first on gestational day 13, and they were positive for all the endocrine markers used. However, pulmonary endocrine cells were positively immunostained for CB-D28K from gestational days 15 and 16 onward. In summary, our observations suggest that CB-D28K is a useful marker for endocrine cells of the lung, and CB-D28K could function as a mediator of endocrine stimulation or calcium homeostasis in pulmonary endocrine cells.

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