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The Journal of Cell Biology, Vol 53, 758-776, Copyright © 1972 by Rockefeller University Press

ARTICLE

VARIATIONS IN TIGHT AND GAP JUNCTIONS IN MAMMALIAN TISSUES

Daniel S. Friend 1 and Norton B. Gilula 1

1 From the Department of Pathology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94122, and the Department of Physiology-Anatomy, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720.

Dr. Gilula's present address is the Department of Anatomy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.

The fine structure and distribution of tight (zonula occludens) and gap junctions in epithelia of the rat pancreas, liver, adrenal cortex, epididymis, and duodenum, and in smooth muscle were examined in paraformaldehyde-glutaraldehyde-fixed, tracer-permeated (K-pyroantimonate and lanthanum), and freeze-fractured tissue preparations. While many pentalaminar and septilaminar foci seen in thin-section and tracer preparations can be recognized as corresponding to well-characterized freeze-fracture images of tight and gap junction membrane modifications, many others cannot be unequivocally categorized—nor can all freeze-etched aggregates of membrane particles. Generally, epithelia of exocrine glands (pancreas and liver) have moderate-sized tight junctions and large gap junctions, with many of their gap junctions basal to the junctional complex. In contrast, the adrenal cortex, a ductless gland, may not have a tight junction but does possess large gap junctions. Mucosal epithelia (epididymis and intestine) have extensive tight junctions, but their gap junctions are not as well developed as those of glandular tissue. Smooth muscle contains numerous small gap junctions The incidence, size, and configuration of the junctions we observed correlate well with the known functions of the junctions and of the tissues where they are found.

Submitted on October 26, 1971
Revised on February 25, 1972


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