Abstract

The development of bile ducts in the mouse liver was studied histochemically, with special reference to their preferential differentiation around the portal vein. Both portal vein and hepatic vein shared a common origin, the omphalomesenteric vein. In the early development of the liver, haematopoietic cells were predominant around both veins. With the progressive development of intrahepatic bile ducts, the following three steps were observed: cluster formation of type I hepatocytes around the portal vein, formation of primitive bile duct structures and basal lamina, then formation of ducts surrounded by connective tissue structures composed of type I and type III collagens and lectin-binding sites, which were predominant around the portal vein compared to the hepatic vein. These results suggest that the deposition of abundant connective tissue structures around the portal vein is a prerequisite for the cell differentiation and basal lamina formation in the bile duct precursors. A possible mechanism of the aggregation of type I hepatocytes around the portein vein is also discussed.

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