Abstract
Abstract An attempt was made to determine the nature, origin, and fate of the membrane material of osmiophilic lamellated bodies, using lung tissue from neonate rats. The cytoplasm of the type II alveolar pneumonocyte contains centrioles, multivesicular bodies, and minute free vesicles similar to those in the multivesicular bodies. Autolysosomes, comprising membrane-bounded cytoplasmic regions and osmiophilic lamellated material, also occur in the type II pneumonocytes. The mitochondria often contain concentric membrane accumulations and membranous whorls. The type II alveolar cells are characterised by an intensive autophagy; this is apparently correlated with glycogenolysis, and with a radical cytodifferentiation by which the cells transform to the type I pneumonocyte. The osmiophilic lamellae of the autolysosomes are probably emptied isolation membranes. The mitochondria possibly serve as repositories for the massive membrane accumulations remaining after cytoplasmic lysis, which may invaginate into th...
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