The ultrastructure of the thyroid epithelial cell was examined at various time intervals after induction of involution of the hyperplastic thyroid gland. Thyroids were made hyperplastic by the feeding of thiouracil in a Remington low-iodine diet to male Fischer rats for 3 weeks. Involution was induced by replacing the thiouracil-containing diet with Purina Laboratory Chow, a high-iodine diet. During involution, organelles that play a role in the synthesis and secretion of thyroglobulin, such as the rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and apical vesicles, were well preserved and prominent features of the epithelial cell. The apical plasma membrane of many cells was highly irregular for approximately 2 weeks with signs suggesting rapid discharge of apical-vesical contents into the lumen of the follicle. Pseudopods and colloid droplets were present but were not very prominent features of the cell. No signs of extensive autophagy or obvious increased incidence of lysosomes were present, although there was an elevation in the incidence of small dense bodies starting about day 8, and prominent by 15 days. Some of these may be phagosomes formed from luminal debris. The observations indicate that involution of the hyperplastic thyroid in which there is maintenance of the protein synthetic apparatus and little sign of autophagy or death of the epithelial cells is remarkably different from phenomena occurring during involution of prostate or mammary glands.
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