Abstract

Isolated parathyroid glands from normal adult Mongolian gerbils were incubated for 15 minutes to 3 1/2 hours either at high or low concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ after which they were studied ultrastructurally, using the pyroantimonate technique and x-ray analysis for identification and son concentrations were mainly composed of suppressed chief cells with moderate or high cytoplasmic density, sparsely developed endoplasmic reticulum, often large Golgi complex, occassional cytoplasmic accumulations of secretory granules, lipoid bodies, glycogen-like particles, and numerous often large mitochondria. Ca2+-containing precipitates were found mainly in mitochondria. Autophagic vacuoles contained Ca2+-loaded degenerating mitochondria. Glands exposed to low concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ were mainly composed of stimulated and active chief cells; characteristic features were a moderate or low cytoplasmic density, prominent endoplasmic reticulum, small Golgi complex, medium-sized, or small mitochondria, and smooth electron lucent vacuoles with or without an association of mitochondria. Ca2+-containing precipitates were found mainly in smooth vacuoles and cytosol, but also in mitochondria and routh vacuoles. Myelin-like figures and crystalloid bodies occurred in some mitochondria, and normal or degenerating mitochondria withoug Ca2+-loading were seen in autophagic vacuoles. In addition, some stimulated chief cells exhibited double membrane-limited sequestered areas of cytoplasm with a rich content of free ribosomes and glycogen-like particles. The chief cell mitochondria seem to possess capacity for rapid accumulation of Ca2+, associated with an increase in volume at functional suppression. At stimulation of parathyroid function the endoplasmic reticulum is prominent in the active cells, and there seems to be a decrease in the volume and Ca2+-content of the mitochondria occasionally associated with degenerative changes, and a decrease also in the number of free ribosomes and glycogen-like particles in the stimulated cells.

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