Abstract

The ultrastructure of the pineal organ was studied in the tropical megachiropteran Rousettus leschenaulti. The pineal lies deep beneath the hemispheres adjacent to the third ventricle and is traversed by the habenular commissure anteriorly. Its parenchyma consists of a uniform population of light and occasional dark pinealocytes which appear to differ only in the degree of cytoplasmic staining. Pinealocytes are characterized by well developed Golgi bodies associated with numerous small vesicles, many mitochondria and polyribosomes, and frequent subsurface cisternae. Lipid droplets and elements of smooth endoplasmic reticulum are scant. Cisternae of granular endoplasmic reticulum are occasionally dilated. A distinct feature is the abundance of clear vesicles in the pinealocyte pericapillary terminals, which also frequently contain granular vesicles and a very large vacuole. The pineal is further characterized by the presence of a small number of glial cells and myelinated nerve fibers. A broad perivascular space investing numerous capillaries contains glial-cell and pinealocyte processes, collagen fibrils and abundant unmyelinated nerve fibers. Tortuous extensions of the perivascular space enter the pineal parenchyma where they come in close proximity to branched intercellular channels or canaliculi characterized by specialized junctions and microvilli. Differences between the pineal of the non-hibernating megachiropteran Rousettus and that of the hibernating microchiropteran bats, and structural similarities to the pineal of tropical rodents are discussed.

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