Abstract
Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICCs) were identified in the digestive tract of turkeys by electron microscopy. ICCs have been implicated as sources of pacemaking slow wave potentials that initiate peristalsis in the stomach and intestines in mammals. The gastroduodenal contraction cycle in turkeys, however, is uniquely coordinated by a neurogenic pacemaker in the isthmus area between the glandular stomach and the gizzard, and this controls the coordinated phasic contractions of the muscles of the gizzard, duodenum and glandular stomach. Thus, it becomes important to look for the presence and distribution of ICCs in the avian digestive tract, especially in the gizzard and duodenum. This investigation has identified that cells are present which contain the typical characteristics of ICCs including: numerous mitochondria, caveolae, thin processes, basement membrane, filaments, rough ER, Golgi, and occasional gap junctions. They were mostly located in the region of the myenteric plexus between the longitudinal and circular muscle layers and occasionally within the longitudinal muscle layer. They were frequently near nerve axon bundles and were usually surrounded by collagen, elastin fibers, and occasional fibroblasts or blood vessels. ICCs were easily found in the ileum, but were also present in the duodenum, cecum, and rectum. None were found in the serosal region of the thick muscle of the gizzard. The presence of ICCs in the turkey duodenum, which like the gizzard is under neurogenic control, suggests that ICCs may play a role(s) in addition to initiating peristalsis.
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