Abstract

An ultrastructural comparison of mammalian, reptilian, and amphibian lung alveolar cells, and avian lung atrial cells reveals that morphologically similar cytoplasmic bodies (cytosomes) occur in these cells. The cytosomes, which appear generally as osmiophilic, lamellae-containing, membrane-bound, round bodies 0.3 to 0.5 μ in diameter, are also similar to bodies occurring in epithelial cells of both physoclistous and physostomatous swimbladders of fishes. Because the function of both lung alveolar and swimbladder epithelial cells is gas-handling, the possibility is raised that the morphologically similar lamellae-containing bodies of these vertebrate cells are functionally identical. One function, suggested by other investigators, is that, in mammalian lungs, these bodies supply a surface-tension lowering material (surfactant). Because several assumptions concerning this proposed function remain unproved, an alternative proposal is speculatively explored. The suggestion is offered that cytosomes contain an antioxidant needed to protect alveolar and swimbladder cells against the toxic effects of the relatively high concentration of oxygen to which these cells are exposed.

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