In the slides of submandibular
gland, note the two different types of staining known as serous and
mucous. The staining difference is important and reflects
fundamental differences in cell function.
- Serous acini secrete a
protein-rich product with various digestive enzymes and stain
fairly well due to the presence of rER and secretory granules
(dense protein-filled vesicles) in the cytoplasm.
- Mucous acini, like goblet cells,
secrete mucus, which contains less protein but much watery “mucopolysaccharide.”
- Mucous cells stain very
poorly because they contain little rER and their mucin
granules tend to react poorly with most stains. The
distinction between serous and mucous types of secretory
cells will be important later in the course (more important
actually than the morphological distinctions discussed
above.)
Sketch one or two serous and mucous
cells and show the differences between them.
So, how do the secretory cells actually
produce and release their product? |