Abstract

Developmental patterns of accumulation of chymotrypsinogen, procarboxypeptidase A, amylase, and endonuclease in the embryonic chick pancreas were compared. The enzymes studied seem to fall into two classes: (1) those, like amylase and procarboxypeptidase, which start to accumulate rapidly at early stages of development and which accumulate in two steps; and (2) those, like chymotrypsinogen and endonuclease, which accumulate slowly during early development (before 14 days) and rapidly thereafter in a single step. Hydrocortisone (hemisuccinate) injection at 10 and 12 days of development causes a precocious increase in the levels of amylase, procarboxypeptidase A, chymotrypsinogen, and, to a lesser extent, endonuclease. The levels of chymotrypsinogen and endonuclease increase during the first day after hydrocortisone injection, whereas the levels of amylase and procarboxypeptidase A are elevated only after a lag of at least a day. Effects of hydrocortisone injection on acinar cell ultrastructure were also investigated. Injection of the hormone prematurely induced a rapid proliferation of the rough endoplasmic reticulum and a sharp increase in the number and size of zymogen granules. The data support the hypothesis that the exocrine chick pancreas differentiates in two phases, an early phase and a maturation phase and that the latter phase is initiated by adrenal cortical steroids secreted by the embryo.

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