Abstract

The histophysiology of both brown and yellow paracloacal glands of control animals from wild populations was analyzed in the breeding and non-breeding seasons and in oophorectomized animals. The effect of estrogens on the scent glands of female Metachirus nudicaudatus was investigated. Radioimmunoassay indicated that estradiol levels in the breeding season were high, while those in the non-breeding season and oophorectomized had minute amounts. No apparent change in gland volume was observed in the various animal groups. Light microscopy showed a wide variation in the number of layers of the holocrine secretory epithelium of the major (brown) gland between the breeding (1–7) and non-breeding season (8–19) and in oophorectomized (8–18) animals. The minor (yellow) gland showed the most evident variation: the holocrine epithelium was restricted to the basal layer in the breeding season, but was restored and exhibited up to eight layers in the non-breeding season and in oophorectomized females. The mean cellular area of the secretory holocrine epithelium in the breeding season was smaller than in the non-breeding period and in castrated animals. On the other hand, the mean cellular areas of tubular glands inserted in both yellow and brown glands in the breeding season were larger than those in the non-breeding season and after castration. The results consistently indicate that the glandular volumes of yellow and brown glands do not depend on estrogens, whereas the holocrine secretory epithelium and tubular glands of both are estrogenic modulation.

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