Abstract

The effects of colchicine on collagen formation were examined ultrastructurally using secretory odontoblasts in mouse molar tooth germs isografted to the spleen for 1 week. Colchicine in concentrations of 0.025 or 0.05 mg/0.1 ml was injected intravenously 12-24 h prior to harvesting. Colchicine induced the disruption of the Golgi apparatus and caused the accumulation of various types of Golgi-associated vacuoles containing collagenous fibrillar structures. Many vacuoles containing fine particles, nonstriated parallel filaments, banding patterns with a periodicity of approximately 63-nm intervals, and occasionally segment-long-spacing-like assemblies were aggregated in the cytoplasm during the experimental period. These morphological changes in vacuole contents may reflect the initial steps for polymerization of the intracellular collagen fibrils. The majority of the aggregated vacuoles were degraded by fusion with lysosomes but banded filamentous material in some vacuoles appeared to polymerize into the collagen fibrils with native structures. These results suggested that in unsecreted vacuoles accumulated in the odontoblasts as a result of colchicine administration the polymerization of collagen fibrils with native structures can occur.

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