Tissues of White Leghorn embryos of stages 1745 and chicks of one day, two days, and three weeks of age were frozen, sectioned in a cryostat and, where appropriate, were fixed in cold calcium formol. Acid phosphatase, non-specific esterase, adenosine triphosphatase, 5-nucleotidase, non-specific glyc
Histochemistry of the developing chick esophagus and trachea. I. Alkaline phosphatase
β Scribed by Gertrude W. Hinsch; Susan K. Buxbaum
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1965
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 545 KB
- Volume
- 116
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0362-2525
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β¦ Synopsis
Tissues of White Leghorn embryos of stages 17-45, and chicks of one day, two days, and three weeks of age were frozen or fixed in 85% ethanol. Alkaline phosphatase was identified using the azo-dye or Gomori techniques.
Alkaline phosphatase activity is found in the ventral mesenchyme of the esophagus surrounding the epithelium to stage 34. At stage 38 activity appears in the basal layers of the epithelium and is subsequently lost in the mesenchymal tissues. This activity persists in the epithelium throughout development and following hatching, At 16 days the mucous glands arise as solid buds of epithelium projecting into the tunica propria. These buds are highly positive for alkaline phosphatase. As differentiation of the glands becomes complete they and their ducts lose their positive phosphatase reaction.
On the fourth day of development the trachea is found lying ventral to the esophagus. Mesenchyme has condensed around the tracheal epithelium by the fifth day, at stage 37 (11 days) the first cartilaginous rings appear, and by stage 38
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