Abstract

The ultrastructure of prostatic secretory cells was studied with the osmium impregnation technique in order to determine if the ER reactivity, or its absence, and its three-dimensional organization correspond to specific functions possibly hormono-dependent. Thick sections (0.3 micron) of rat ventral prostate were made after a five-day impregnation with osmium tetroxide and examined by standard transmission electron microscopy at 80 kV. Studies were performed in normal adult rats, between the 3rd and 26th day following castration and in castrated rats treated with 5-alpha-dihydrotestosterone. In normal rats the impregnation technique delineated three secretory cell types (dark, greyish and clear), representing various degrees of reactivity in ER cisternae; however, despite this quantitative variation, they had similar morphological characteristics. In a longitudinal section, the ER network appeared to be made of saccules running parallel along the length of the cell and forming whorl-like patterns around the nucleus. Comparison of sections taken at various angles suggests that the ER network is made of concentric parallel saccules extending from the base to the apex of the cell and encircling the nucleus and the Golgi apparatus like a large multilayered cylinder. Whereas in dark cells the Golgi apparatus contained mostly clear vesicles, it was always heavily impregnated in clear cells. Noteworthy, osmium deposits were rarely observed on the nuclear envelope of secretory cells but were always present in basal cells. After castration, secretory cells became progressively cubic and the most conspicuous cytoplasmic change was observed in association with the ER. The Golgi apparatus decreased markedly in volume and became heavily stained with metallic osmium.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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