Abstract

The ontogenesis of the pineal gland of 20 bovine embryos (Bos taurus) has been analysed from 160 days of gestation to birth by means of optical microscopy and immunohistochemical techniques. For this study, the specimens were grouped into two stage in accordance with the most relevant histological characteristics: Stage 1 (160 to 200 days of prenatal development) and Stage 2 (220 days of prenatal development to birth). At 160 days of gestation some rounded structures with a central lumen, which we refer to as glandular rosettes, begin differentiation from the epithelium of the pineal recess, experiencing an extraordinary increase in number and size at 200 days of intrauterine life. In the interior of the pineal parenchyma we observed some morphologically rounded cells with oval euchromatic nuclei and a well-differentiated nucleolus that we refer to as the pinealoblasts. We also observed other cells characterised by the presence of low cytoplasm and rounded and highly stained nuclei that we refer to as the interstitial cells. The glandular stroma is formed from the capsular, trabecular, and perivascular connective tissue as well as from the reticular network that comes from the cellular processes of the interstitial cells. The blood vessels, at 240 of gestation, show well-formed walls where the endothelial cells stand out. At 160 days of gestation we witnessed some cells with small, dense, oval nuclei, positive to the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). At this age NPY positive fibres were detected, distributed around the blood vessels and among the pinealoblasts. We conclude by clarifying that the changes detected in the morphology as well as in the number and size of glandular rosettes appear to be related to the functional activity of the pineal gland during embryonic development.

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