Identification of mammosomatotropes, growth hormone cells and prolactin cells in the pituitary gland of the gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L., Teleostei) using light immunocytochemical methods: an ontogenetic study
M. Villaplana et al., Identification of mammosomatotropes, growth hormone cells and prolactin cells in the pituitary gland of the gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L., Teleostei) using light immunocytochemical methods: an ontogenetic study, ANAT EMBRYO, 202(5), 2000, pp. 421-429
Growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) immunoreactivities in the adenohypo
physis of Sparus aurata specimens from newly hatched until 48-months-old we
re detected using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. GH cells and PRL ce
lls, and cells that were immunoreactive to both GH and PRL antisera, called
mammosomatotropes (MS cells), were found. This is the first report on the
identification of MS cells in fish, which were found in newly hatched and o
lder larvae and juvenile specimens. GH and PRL cells appeared from two days
after hatching. MS cells were first located in the central region of the a
denohypophysis and afterwards in the rostral pars distalis. The GH cells we
re first identified in the dorsal and ventral areas of the middle-posterior
part, and the PRL cells in the ventral region of the middle-anterior part.
Later, during development, the sequence of appearance of the GH cells was
proximal pars distalis, pars intermedia and rostral pars distalis, while fo
r the PRL cells sequence was rostral pars distalis, proximal pars distalis
and pars intermedia. This expansion pattern could be due to a GH- and PRL-c
ell migration although independent cell differentiation may occur in each r
egion. The present results suggest that GH and PRL cells arise from MS cell
s at the outset of pituitary development, while MS cells precede from PRL c
ells in old larvae and juveniles.