Abstract

The microvascularization of the pancreas of larval and adult South African Clawed Toads Xenopus laevis, was studied by scanning electron microscopy of vascular corrosion casts and light microscopy of paraplast embedded Goldner-stained serial tissue sections. We showed that branches of left and right gastric artery, hepatic artery and anterior intestinal artery, namely anterior pancreatic, anterior middle pancreatic, posterior middle pancreatic and caudal pancreatic arteries supply and pancreatic veins drain the adult pancreas into hepatic portal vein, anterior and middle gastric vein, gastroduodenal vein, and anterior duodenal vein. In premetamorphosis the pancreas showed a dense but immature vascular bed with signs of ongoing sprouting and non-sprouting angiogenesis (=intussusceptive microvascular growth; IMG). During metamorphic climax the pancreas shrinked dramatically paralleled by vascular regression.The larval pancreas had an underdeveloped ductal system which in the course of pancreas remodeling during metamorphic climax developed into a complex ductal system. In adult Xenopus laevis the pancreas showed intralobular islets of Langerhans only and an insuloacinar portal vessel system as described sofar in reptiles, birds and mammals. Islets in Xenopus located superficially and within deeper regions and emitted both insulo-acinar portal vessels and insulo-venous efferent vessels. Intrainsular microvascular patterns found suggest that in Xenopus islets blood flows first to β-cells and subsequently to the other endocrine cells present in the endocrine pancreas. Key words: Xenopus, pancreas, microvascularization, vascular casts, histomorphology

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