Abstract

Applying the zone concept described previously, we quantitatively analyzed fetal rat lung development. The zone concept allowed us to coherently define reference spaces in the developing lung, a prerequisite for morphometric analysis. The peripheral zone I corresponds to a zone of growth of yet undifferentiated tissues; zone II arises from zone I and represents a region of structural and cellular differentiation; zones III and IV comprise the conducting airways and vessels. Lungs of fetal rats aged 17-23 days and 20 hours postnatal were fixed with OsO4 and glutaraldehyde and processed for light and electron microscopic morphometry implemented by point and intersection counting. Fetal lung volume grew in proportion to body weight. Zone II being the largest compartment, its volume changes largely determined lung growth rates. Zone II increased in mass owing to differentiation processes at the interface to zone I where the proximal portions of zone I were continuously shifted into zone II by differentiation. New tissue was generated within zone I. Due to these combined processes zone I changed little in volume until it disappeared at the end of the canalicular stage. The presence in the pseudoglandular stage of half of the parenchymal epithelial mass available around birth indicated that parenchymal development started earlier than assumed so far. While the endothelial surface increased most at birth, the epithelial surface grew by more than 600% at day 21, reflecting the onset of canalisation. The study confirmed the usefulness of the zone concept for morphometry and provided some new insights into lung development.

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