Abstract

Nucleoside phosphatase and nucleotide tetrazolium reductase reactions were studied as potential markers of arteriolar differentiation. Arteriolar systems were analyzed cytochemically and morphologically in a variety of fetal pig tissues at 70 and 110 days of gestation. In skeletal muscle and subcutaneous adipose tissue there were age dependent changes in phosphatase and reductase reactivity in arteriolar vessels. These changes were temporally associated with the morphological differentiation of the tunica medial arteriolar layer. There were no age dependent changes in the cytochemistry of arterioles in liver and cardiac muscle. In the youngest fetuses, arterioles in liver and cardiac muscle displayed a typical tunica medial layer (normal morphology). The cytochemical reactions (phosphatase, reductase) of arterioles in cardiac muscle and liver from 70 (and 110) days old fetuses were identical to cytochemical reactions of arterioles in muscle and adipose tissue from 110 days old fetuses. In the skin, there were age dependent increases in phosphatase reactive arterioles and capillaries. Capillary staining (phosphatase) and capillary bed size were inversely correlated in the skin. Capillaries in skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle, adipose tissue and liver were not phosphatase reactive. These results indicate that the morphological and cytochemical differentiation of arterioles is dependent on tissue and age in the fetal pig. Furthermore, several histochemical techniques (phosphatase, reductases) are validated as simple means to analyze arteriolar differentiation in general.

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