Abstract
The structural relationship between type I glomus cells and the vascular smooth muscle was investigated by electron microscopy in the mouse carotid body. A close apposition (<0.1 microm) between the glomus parenchyma and the neighbouring arterioles was regularly present. Profiles of type I glomus cells were found to be exposed to the vascular smooth muscle without any supporting cell investment. In circumscribed areas of these profiles, type I glomus cells and the vascular smooth muscle cells made contact by fusion of their basal laminae. These glomus-cell-myocyte junctions structurally resemble vascular neuromuscular junctions of sympathetic nerve terminals. In addition to the occurrence of such glomus cell-myocyte contacts, myoendothelial junctions also appeared frequently. On the basis of these observations, it is suggested that type I glomus cells play a role in the regulation of the vascular tone in the carotid body and that a physiological interaction between the endothelial cells, the vascular smooth muscle cells and the type I glomus cells exists.
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