Abstract
Endocrine and endothelial cells of the anterior pituitary gland frequently make close appositions or contacts, and the secretory granules of each endocrine cell tend to accumulate at the perivascular regions, which is generally considered to facilitate secretory functions of these cells. However, three-dimensional relationships between the localization pattern of secretory granules and blood vessels are not fully understood. To define and characterize these spatial relationships, we used scanning electron microscopy (SEM) three-dimensional reconstruction method based on focused ion-beam slicing and scanning electron microscopy (FIB/SEM). Full three-dimensional cellular architectures of the anterior pituitary tissue at ultrastructural resolution revealed that about 70% of endocrine cells were in apposition to the endothelial cells, while almost 30% of endocrine cells were entirely isolated from perivascular space in the tissue. Our three-dimensional analyses also visualized the distribution pattern of secretory granules in individual endocrine cells, showing an accumulation of secretory granules in regions in close apposition to the blood vessels in many cases. However, secretory granules in cells isolated from the perivascular region tended to distribute uniformly in the cytoplasm of these cells. These data suggest that the cellular interactions between the endocrine and endothelial cells promote an uneven cytoplasmic distribution of the secretory granules.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
The anterior lobe of pituitary gland (adenohypophysis) is a primary endocrine tissue that consists of five types of endocrine cells, i.e. somatotrophs, lactotrophs, gonadotrophs, corticotrophs, and thyrotrophs, and non-endocrine, folliculostellate cells. It contains abundant capillaries that facilitate the secretory functions of anterior pituitary cells. The hormonal signals from hypothalamus to the pituitary and/or the pituitary to its target organs are thought to diffuse in the intercellular space between endothelial cell and endocrine cells1. In this context, the spatial relationship between the capillaries and the endocrine cells plays an important role regulating their secretory function. Previous reports have shown that microvascular density of pituitary tumours is smaller than in normal pituitary gland, and the density varies with adenoma histotypes2,3,4.
Light and electron microscopic studies suggest that a considerable portion of the anterior pituitary gland endocrine cells interacts with the neighbouring capillaries5,6,7,8. However, the precise three-dimensional (3D) architecture and spatial relationships between the anterior pituitary gland endocrine cells and capillaries are not well-defined, because the 3D cellular processes are difficult to visualize by immunohistochemical approaches or single-section approaches such as transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Immunohistochemistry using anti-hormone antibodies can be used to visualize the localization of secretory granules (SG) and has frequently been used to visualize the shape of endocrine cells in pituitary gland, but the SGs are not distributed uniformly in the cytoplasms and it is not always possible to visualize all cellular processes using this method. Additionally, some types of endocrine cells are known to extend their cellular process in 3D, but such cellular processes are only observed as a fragment of the cytoplasm in TEM photomicrographs. Therefore the 3D relationships between the cells and their neighboring capillaries are not well defined.
In this study, we analysed the complete 3D architecture and cellular organization of the anterior pituitary tissue in rats, using focused ion-beam scanning electron microscope (FIB/SEM), a novel morphology technique also referred to as “FIB/SEM tomography” that enables visualization of detailed spatial relationships between cells within a tissue9,10,11 FIB/SEM tomography is a scanning electron microscope-based 3D reconstruction method that enables the analysis of large-scale 3D architecture of tissues (ca. 5 × 105 μm3) at electron microscopic resolution. It also enables visualization of spatial relationships of many cells in a reconstructed area9,10,11. Using this reconstruction method, we here demonstrated that some endocrine cells do not face the capillaries and are separated from the perivascular space. Additionally, we analysed the distribution patterns of SGs in endocrine cells. As observed by single section analyses, SGs tended to localize and accumulate at secretion sites, such as the juxtavascular regions of the cytoplasm. The mechanism of their specific accumulation at secretion sites is currently unknown. Here, we evaluated the spatial relationship between SG accumulation sites and the apposition between the endocrine and endothelial cells.
Methods
All experiments were performed in accordance with the National Institutes of Health guidelines for animal research. This study received the approval of the ethics review board of Kurume University Animal Care Centre.
Specimen preparation
Pituitary glands were obtained from six male Wistar rats(220–250 g). The animals were deeply anesthetized with diethyl ether and peritoneal injection of sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg). and left ventricle perfusion with heparin-containing saline (10 U/mL) and fixatives was performed as follows. For immunohistochemistry, the animals (n = 3) were perfused with formaldehyde (4%) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) as a fixative, and the pituitary glands were immediately collected and incubated in sucrose (30%)-PBS overnight at 4 °C. The specimens were then embedded in OCT compound (Sakura Finetek, Tokyo, Japan) and frozen. For FIB/SEM tomography, the animals (n = 3) were perfused with formaldehyde (2%) and glutaraldehyde (2.5%) in cacodylate buffer (0.1 M, pH 7.4) as a fixative, and the pituitary glands were then removed and cut into 0.5 mm slices. The specimens were further incubated in the same fixative, 2 h at 4 °C, and washed 3 times with cacodylate buffer (0.1 M, pH 7.4). To enhance membrane contrast, the tissues were post-fixed and en bloc stained with heavy metals12,13,14,15,16,17,18, as follows. The specimens were immersed in 0.1 M cacodylate-buffered (pH 7.4) 2% osmium tetroxide and 1.5% potassium ferrocyanide solution for 2 h at 4 °C, and then washed five times with distilled water. After that, they were incubated in 1% thiocarbohydrazide solution for 1 h. After five washes with distilled water, they were incubated in aqueous osmium tetroxide solution (2%) for 2 h, and then again washed five times with distilled water. They were immersed in an aqueous solution of 4% uranyl acetate overnight, washed five times with distilled water, and immersed in Walton’s lead aspartate solution for 1 h at 60 °C19. After that, the specimens were dehydrated in chilled ethanol series (25%, 50%, 70%, 80%, 90%, and twice in 100%, 10 min each on ice), followed by epoxy resin infiltration (EPON 812, TAAB, England) and polymerization for 72 h at 60 °C. Surfaces of the embedded specimens were exposed using Ultracut E microtome (Reichert-Nissei, Tokyo), the resin blocks trimmed to 1.5 mm2 and imaged with SEM (Quanta 3D FEG, FEI, the Netherlands).
Immunohistochemistry
Cryosections with a thickness of 30 μm were prepared using a HM560 cryomicrotome (Micron, Germany), and released into PBS. The floating sections were then incubated with blocking solution containing 3% normal goat serum and 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS for light microscopy or 3% normal goat serum in PBS for immune electoron microscopy, and transferred to anti-rabbit ACTH polyclonal antiserumdiluted with blocking solution (1:2000 dilution, Zymed, CA) overnight at 4 °C, followed by rinsing 4 times with PBS. For fluorescence microscopy, addition to the primary antibody, we also reacted with biotin-conjugated Griffonia simplicifolia 1 lectin (1:1600 dilution, Vector Labs, CA) for endothelial labeling. The sections were then incubated with Alexa 488-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG antibody (1:200 dilution, Invitrogen Life Technologies, CA) as a secondary antibody and Alexa 568 conjugated streptavidin (1:200 dilution, Invitrogen Life Technologies, CA) for 4 h at room temperature. After subsequent rinsing with PBS, the sections were mounted using PermaFluor mounting medium (Thermo Shandon, PA) and observed under a confocal laser scanning microscope (FV1000, Olympus) with acquisition parameters as follows: excitation at 473 nm and 559 nm, x60 oil immersion lens (NA = 1.2), image size = 105 μm × 105 μm. For immunoelectron microscopy, the floating sections were then incubated with biotin-conjugated goat anti rabbit IgG diluted in the blocking buffer (1:200, BA-1000, Vector Labs, CA). After 4 washes with PBS, the sections were reacted with ABC complex solution (Nacalai Tesque, Kyoto, Japan) and then the DAB reaction was performed following the manufacturer’s instructions. The specimens were dehydrated with a gradient series of acetone and embedded in epoxy resin (EPON812, TAAB, England). Ultrathin sections of the specimens were stained with saturated uranyl acetate solution and examined using transmission electron microscopy (H-7000, Hitachi).
FIB/SEM tomography
Serial stacked images for 3D reconstruction were obtained using an FIB/SEM apparatus (FEI Quanta 3D FEG, Netherlands) as described previously. To obtain high-contrast images, we applied sample bias voltage, also referred to as retarding, during the image acquisition for part of the reconstruction. The specimens were set on a originally manufactured pre-tilted holder that prevented sample bias-derived severe astigmatism during the image acquisition17. Specimen milling and imaging were performed as follows. The gallium ion beam for specimen milling was set at 30 kV, with a current of 5 nA. The milling pitch was set to 50 nm/step (BSE) or 100 nm/step (SE). Images were acquired using either back-scattered electrons (BSE) with sample bias or secondary electrons (SE) without sample bias, under the following conditions. All image sizes were set at 2048 × 1766 pixels with a pixel resolution of 50 nm (99.5 μm × 85.9 μm). Conditions for BSE images were detector = VCD (FEI), acceleration voltage = 5 keV of landing energy with 1 kV of sample bias, beam current = 13.6 pA, and dwell time = 30 μs/pixel. Conditions for SE images were detection = Everhart-Thornley (FEI), acceleration voltage = 2.5 keV (without sample bias), beam current = 50 pA, and dwell time = 10 μm/pixel. The milling and imaging were repeated 500 or 600 times.
3D reconstruction and segmentation
The shapes of cells, SGs, and blood vessels were segmented and annotated from the 3D reconstruction volume data using Avizo 6.5 software (FEI Visualization Sciences Group, Bordeaux, France). After the image alignment, lumens of blood vessels were segmented automatically with a threshold method, while cellular shapes were selected manually. Only cells entirely within the reconstructed volume were subjected to 3D analysis. SGs were further segmented from the cytoplasm as an electron dense region using a cell-by-cell threshold method.
Cell classification
Anterior pituitary cells were classified into five types according to their ultrastructural characteristics, as previously reported20: type 1, polygonal cells with very small SGs (smaller than 100 nm); type 2, extended cells with long irregular granules (400–700 nm); type 3, large irregularly-shaped cells with small SGs (150–200 nm) predominantly in the peripheral region of the cytoplasm; type 4, cells of intermediate size, with round dense granules (about 350 nm); type 5, long cells with SGs (200 nm or 500 nm in diameter). Different cell types secrete different hormones, as follows: thyroid-stimulating hormone-producing thyrotrophs (TSH, type 1), luteotropic hormone-producing lactotrophs (LTH, type 2), adrenocorticotropic hormone-producing corticotrophs (ACTH, type 3), somatotropin hormone-producing somatotrophs (STH, type 4), gonadotropin hormone-producing gonadotrophs (GTH, type 5)20,21,22.
Statistical analysis of granule distribution pattern
We used type 4 cells (somatotroph) for statistical analyses of the unevenness of SG distribution. Measurable cells were selected from the reconstructions in both “contact” (n = 20) and “isolated” (n = 12) categories. First, we calculated the centre of gravity (CG) of the area of the whole cell using Avizo software. Next, we extracted the SG area in the cell based on its high electron density using simple thresholding and calculated the CG of the extracted SG area. Then, the distance between two points, i.e., between the CG of the whole cell and the CG of the SG area, was calculated in each cell. The obtained values were analysed using JMP version 11 (SAS Institute Inc. Cary, NC, USA). Comparisons between groups were performed using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Differences were considered significant at p < 0.05.
Results
FIB/SEM tomography allows 3D reconstruction of the anterior pituitary gland
We used FIB/SEM tomography to examine rat anterior pituitary glands. Regions for 3D reconstruction were randomly selected from the whole resin-embedded glands (Fig. 1a coloured area), and 500 to 750 serial images were acquired. The final reconstruction size was approximately 100 × 100 × 50 μm3 to 100 × 100 × 75 μm3 (Fig. 1b). Each block face image had sufficient resolution to characterize SGs (Fig. 1c) and also distribution pattern of the SGs, but the reconstruction was not sufficient to analyse the shape of each SG, especially in the case of Type 1 cells, because the size of the SG was equivalent to almost 2 pixels of the image. Although the depth resolution of the reconstructions was lower than that of the lateral resolution of the individual block face image, it was sufficient to obtain detailed 3D profiles of vessel networks (Fig. 1d) and endocrine cells (Fig. 1e). Three segmentations showed that each reconstruction contained approximately 100 cells.
FIB/SEM tomography facilitates endocrine cell typing
In this study, we analysed three pituitary glands and counted 96, 72, and 98 endocrine cells in reconstructions 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The milling pitch and final reconstruction size of reconstructions are summarized in supplemental Table 1. These cells were classified into five types according to the shape and distribution pattern of SGs, as mentioned in the Method section (Table 1). For example, cells with small SGs (150–200 nm) localized in the peripheral cytoplasmic region, which were classified as type 3, were considered to be consistent with ACTH cells20 (Fig. 2a). We also verified that cells having such a distribution of SGs coincided with ACTH cells by fluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopic detection of ACTH (Fig. 2b). Such a unique SG distribution pattern was also observed in the FIB/SEM reconstruction volume (Fig. 2c), and we classified the cells as Type 3 cells in this study. The 3D distribution pattern of SGs in the cell is shown in Fig. 2d–f. The distribution pattern in Fig. 2d and e indicated a slender and cytoplasmic process-like shape (Fig. 2d,e, arrows), which was similar to the pattern in immunohistochemistry (Fig. 2a). However there were cells that difficult to classify into the 5 types based only on their SG characteristics, and we labelled them as “others” in Table 1.
Spatial relationships between endocrine and endothelial cells reveal the existence of apposed and isolated endocrine cells
We analysed the spatial relationships between endothelial cells and each endocrine cell type. Some endocrine cells that localized around the blood vessels faced the capillary walls. We observed a small gap (ca. 600 nm) between these cells and the endothelial cells and no specialized junction structures (Fig. 3, coloured area). Furthermore, SGs in these cells tended to accumulate in regions facing the endothelial cell (Fig. 3, arrows). In this paper, we name the regions where endocrine cells directly face endothelial cells “apposition sites” (Fig. 4a), and we term cells with more than one apposition site “apposed.” When no apposition sites were seen between endocrine cells and the capillary walls (Fig. 4b), we considered the endocrine cells “isolated” (Table 1). Since the apposition site sizes vary depending on the relative positioning of cells, we only counted apposition sites where the long axes exceeded 500 nm. Approximately 31% of all endocrine cells detected by us were “isolated” (Table 1) and such isolated cells were observed for all endocrine cell types (Table 1, Figs 4 and 5).
Secretory granule distribution in apposed cells is different from that in isolated cells
3D reconstruction revealed that SGs in cells facing the blood vessels tended to localize in a peripheral cytoplasmic region, close to the apposition site (Fig. 5, left panels). Type 2 cells (LTH) frequently had long cellular processes and many of their SGs accumulated at the perivascular space (Fig. 5a). Type 3 cells (ACTH) usually had a widespread sheet-like cytoplasm (also see Fig. 2f), and SGs naturally localized along the juxta-membrane area (Fig. 2b,c), whereas some SGs accumulated around the perivascular area (Fig. 2f and Fig. 5c). Type 4 cells (STH) had a round-shaped cytoplasm (Fig. 5e), and their SGs accumulated around the perivascular region. In contrast, SGs in cells isolated from the perivascular space appeared to be distributed uniformly in the cytoplasm (Fig. 5, right panels). We obtained a sufficient number of type 3 cells in both the “apposed” and “isolated” state to perform statistical analyses. We measured the CG of each cell and also the CG of the area occupied by SGs within the cell, as described in the Methods section. We then calculated the distance between these points cell by cell. If the SGs were distributed uniformly in the cell, both points were in almost the same position, and the distance between the two CGs became small. In contrast, when SGs were localized in the peripheral terminal of the process, the distance between the CGs tended to become large. In our study, we estimated the distance between CGs in type 4 cells of the isolated group and apposed group, and found that the distance between CGs in the apposed group was significantly larger than that in the isolated group, which suggests that the SGs in the apposed group are more unevenly distributed than those in the isolated group (Fig. 6).
Discussion
In this study, we used FIB/SEM tomography to visualize the cyto-architecture of the anterior pituitary gland with ultrastructural resolution, focusing on the spatial relationships between the endocrine and endothelial cells. We also evaluated the 3D distribution patterns of SGs in each hormone-secreting cell type since the 3D reconstruction data afford sufficient resolution to visualize not only the cellular organization of tissue, but also intracellular spatial localization of SGs.
Each reconstructed region (volume) contained about 100 cells and our data provided enough information to analyse their structural properties. Each acquired image confirmed the classical TEM observations (data not shown), and we were able to classify the endocrine cells into five types, according to their morphological characteristics20,21,22. Indeed, the same endocrine cell types extracted from the reconstructed images had a relatively similar 3D appearance (e.g. Figs 2 and 5), which reflected their previously reported cellular characteristics. For example, a typical adult ACTH cell, verified immunohistochemically, frequently has long cytoplasmic processes extending toward the capillaries23, and this characteristic was seen in our 3D reconstructions when we selectively visualized SGs, as shown in Fig. 2. However, the true 3D structure of a cell is somewhat different from its immunohistochemical characteristics. Large proportion of type 3 cells frequently possessed a sheet-like cytoplasmic extension whose tip, not a fine cellular process, resided in the pericapillary space. Such 3D characteristics of the cell were difficult to glean from only immunohistochemical observation, even when we reconstructed the structure of the cell in 3D using confocal light microscopy, because this technique visualized only the distribution pattern of the hormone in the cell. In contrast, our 3D model easily explained the discrepancy between the immunohistochemical appearance of ACTH cells and the true 3D structure of the cell.
Our imaging experiments clearly visualized the spatial relationship between endocrine cells and vasculature. We demonstrated that about 30% of endocrine cells in the parenchyma of the anterior pituitary gland do not physically interact with endothelial cells. This finding was unexpected since it is widely accepted that a large proportion of the anterior pituitary gland endocrine cells physically interacts with capillary blood vessels24. Developmental studies have revealed that differentiation of the endocrine cells is closely linked to the blood vessels infiltrating the pouch of Rathke25,26,27. Confocal microscopy and multiphoton microscopy studies of topological relationships between endocrine cells and blood vessels reported an evident interaction, interpreted as a framework that facilitates the secretion of hormones. This interaction was confirmed by conventional TEM experiments that evidenced a direct contact between endocrine and endothelial cells20. Our data revealed that 70% of endocrine cells were closely apposed to the perivascular space.
Discovery of endocrine cells isolated from the perivascular space enabled us to attempt to correlate the SG distribution with different cellular interactions (apposed vs. isolated). In our observation, the SGs tended to distribute near the terminal of cellular processes located at perivascular spaces, even in 3D, and this agreed with previous reports24. In contrast, we observed for the first time that SGs in cells without contact to capillaries appeared to be localized more evenly in the cytoplasm. Therefore, we tried to estimate the difference in SG localization in the cells by using the difference in the absolute position of CGs between the whole cellular area and the SG area in the cell. Our statistical analysis revealed that in type 4 cells (somatotrophs), the cytoplasmic SG accumulation was uneven, especially in the vicinity of the endothelial cells. Previous ultrastructural studies indicated that SGs within anterior pituitary cells, such as ACTH or LTH cells, tended to accumulate in the juxtavascular cytoplasm28. Similar accumulation of SGs has been also observed in other endocrine cells, e.g. pancreatic islet cells and basal granulated cells of the intestinal endothelium. These accumulations are thought to be facilitated by a specific intracellular transport system, the regulated secretory pathway (RSP), which carries the SGs to the cytoplasmic area close to the blood vessels and facilitates efficient hormone secretion29. RSP comprises a multiple step post-Golgi vesicular transport system that regulates exocytosis and it is specifically observed in endocrine cells29,30. In this study, we showed a dispersed cytoplasmic distribution of SGs within the “isolated” endocrine cells compared to the “apposed” cells. This suggested that the physical interactions between the endocrine and endothelial cells might induce specific RSP polarity, from the site of biogenesis to the secretion site, close to the vessels. Our reconstruction had sufficient resolution to visualize physical junctions such as desmosomes (data not shown), but we did not observe obvious junctional structures between endothelial and endocrine cells in our 3D analysis. It is possible that focal adhesions were present, but we could not evaluate the formation of focal adhesions in this study because of the resolution. Our findings raise the possibility that some cytokines or paracrine factors, in addition to focal adhesions, may induce cellular RSP polarity, although the molecular mechanism is not known. In the nervous system, humoral factors such as netrins, slits, and semaphorins, induce cellular polarity during neural guidance31,32. These humoral factors induce the extension of axons to create the majestic neuronal networks. Similar humoral mechanisms might perhaps be involved in inducing cellular elongation of the endocrine cells in the direction of vessel walls.
What is the significance of “isolated “endocrine cells that do not contact the blood vessel walls? It is possible that these cells simply remain within the parenchyma as a result of the developmental process but have no function. During the early development of the anterior pituitary gland, most cells are thought to differentiate into mature endocrine cells because of the infiltration of the portal vein. Consequently, they are localized around the vessels, following which these endocrine cells proliferate and begin to extend their cytoplasmic processes toward the vessels6. Some of these processes possibly retract during development and are isolated from the pericapirally space. However, most of “isolated” cells observed here contained abundant SGs within their cytoplasm. We therefore speculate that these cells may contribute to the secretory function of the anterior pituitary gland. Experiments with dextran bead injections into the pituitary gland suggested that hormones might be transported into the bloodstream through intercellular spaces via diffusion33. This implies that the “isolated” cells may contribute to hormone secretion and the secreted hormones would reach the vessel by diffusion, but the diffusion time required for transportation along the intercellular channel from isolated cells to the bloodstream may be longer than that required a cell adjacent to the vessel wall. These morphological differences would result in a different hormone release mode, e.g. sharp and short secretion in apposed cells and slower and smoother secretion in isolated cells.
Our 3D analysis demonstrated novel structural characteristics of the anterior pituitary gland. Cyto-architectural analyses alone are insufficient for fully characterising the hormone secretion mechanisms, but the increased understanding of the actual tissue architecture that they provide will pave the way for characterising the novel, topological, anterior pituitary regulation of systemic hormone secretion.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Yoshitomi, M. et al. Three-dimensional ultrastructural analyses of anterior pituitary gland expose spatial relationships between endocrine cell secretory granule localization and capillary distribution. Sci. Rep. 6, 36019; doi: 10.1038/srep36019 (2016).
Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
References
Draznin, B., Dahl, R., Sherman, N., Sussman, K. E. & Staehelin, L. A. Exocytosis in normal anterior pituitary cells. Quantitative correlation between growth hormone release and the morphological features of exocytosis. The Journal of clinical investigation 81, 1042–1050, doi: 10.1172/jci113415 (1988).
Turner, H. E., Harris, A. L., Melmed, S. & Wass, J. A. Angiogenesis in endocrine tumors. Endocrine reviews 24, 600–632, doi: 10.1210/er.2002-0008 (2003).
Takano, S., Akutsu, H., Hara, T., Yamamoto, T. & Matsumura, A. Correlations of vascular architecture and angiogenesis with pituitary adenoma histotype. International journal of endocrinology 2014, 989574, doi: 10.1155/2014/989574 (2014).
Di Ieva, A. et al. Fractal dimension as a quantitator of the microvasculature of normal and adenomatous pituitary tissue. Journal of anatomy 211, 673–680, doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2007.00804.x (2007).
Itoh, J. et al. A new approach to three-dimensional reconstructed imaging of hormone-secreting cells and their microvessel environments in rat pituitary glands by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry: official journal of the Histochemistry Society 48, 569–578 (2000).
Budry, L. et al. Related pituitary cell lineages develop into interdigitated 3D cell networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108, 12515–12520, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1105929108 (2011).
Veldhuis, J. D., Keenan, D. M. & Pincus, S. M. Motivations and methods for analyzing pulsatile hormone secretion. Endocrine reviews 29, 823–864, doi: 10.1210/er.2008-0005 (2008).
Grattan, D. R. & Kokay, I. C. Prolactin: a pleiotropic neuroendocrine hormone. Journal of neuroendocrinology 20, 752–763, doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2826.2008.01736.x (2008).
Kanazawa, T., Gotoh, M., Ohta, K., Shiba, N. & Nakamura, K. Novel characteristics of normal supraspinatus insertion in rats: an ultrastructural analysis using three-dimensional reconstruction using focused ion beam/scanning electron microscope tomography. Muscles, ligaments and tendons journal 4, 182–187 (2014).
Knott, G., Rosset, S. & Cantoni, M. Focussed ion beam milling and scanning electron microscopy of brain tissue. Journal of visualized experiments: JoVE, e2588, doi: 10.3791/2588 (2011).
Ohta, K., Okayama, S., Togo, A. & Nakamura, K. Three-dimensional organization of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane around the mitochondrial constriction site in mammalian cells revealed by using focused-ion beam tomography. Microscopy (Oxford, England) 63 Suppl 1, i34, doi: 10.1093/jmicro/dfu076 (2014).
Seligman, A. M., Wasserkrug, H. L. & Hanker, J. S. A new staining method (OTO) for enhancing contrast of lipid--containing membranes and droplets in osmium tetroxide--fixed tissue with osmiophilic thiocarbohydrazide(TCH). The Journal of cell biology 30, 424–432 (1966).
De Bruijn, W. A modified OsO4-(double) fixation procedure which selectively contrasts glycogen. In Proc 4th Eur Reg Conf EM, II- 65 (1968).
de Bruijn, W. C. Glycogen, its chemistry and morphologic appearance in the electron microscope. I. A modified OsO 4 fixative which selectively contrasts glycogen. Journal of ultrastructure research 42, 29–50 (1973).
Deerinck, T. et al. Enhancing serial block-face scanning electron microscopy to enable high resolution 3-D nanohistology of cells and tissues. Microscopy and Microanalysis 16, 1138–1139 (2010).
Briggman, K. L., Helmstaedter, M. & Denk, W. Wiring specificity in the direction-selectivity circuit of the retina. Nature 471, 183–188, doi: 10.1038/nature09818 (2011).
Ohta, K. et al. Beam deceleration for block-face scanning electron microscopy of embedded biological tissue. Micron (Oxford, England: 1993) 43, 612–620, doi: 10.1016/j.micron.2011.11.001 (2012).
Tapia, J. C. et al. High-contrast en bloc staining of neuronal tissue for field emission scanning electron microscopy. Nature protocols 7, 193–206, doi: 10.1038/nprot.2011.439 (2012).
Walton, J. Lead asparate, an en bloc contrast stain particularly useful for ultrastructural enzymology. The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry: official journal of the Histochemistry Society 27, 1337–1342 (1979).
Kurosumi, K. Functional classification of cell types of the anterior pituitary gland accomplished by electron microscopy. Archivum histologicum Japonicum = Nihon soshikigaku kiroku 29, 329–362 (1968).
Parsons, J. A. & Erlandsen, S. L. Ultrastructural immunocytochemical localization of prolactin in rat anterior pituitary by use of the unlabeled antibody enzyme method. The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry: official journal of the Histochemistry Society 22, 340–351 (1974).
Moriarty, G. C. Adenohypophysis: ultrastructural cytochemistry. A review. The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry: official journal of the Histochemistry Society 21, 855–894 (1973).
Childs, G. V. Structure-function correlates in the corticotropes of the anterior pituitary. Frontiers in neuroendocrinology 13, 271–317 (1992).
Bidey, S. Endocrine cell culture. (Cambridge University Press, 1998).
Daikoku, S., Kawano, H., Abe, K. & Yoshinaga, K. Topographical appearance of adenohypophysial cells with special reference to the development of the portal system. Archivum histologicum Japonicum = Nihon soshikigaku kiroku 44, 103–116 (1981).
Fink, G. & Smith, G. C. Ultrastructural features of the developing hypothalamo-hypophysial axis in the rat. A correlative study. Zeitschrift fur Zellforschung und mikroskopische Anatomie (Vienna, Austria: 1948) 119, 208–226 (1971).
Negm, I. M. The vascular blood supply of the pituitary and its development. Acta anatomica 80, 604–619 (1971).
Naik, D. V. Electron microscopic-immunocytochemical localization of adrenocorticotropin and melanocyte stimulating hormone in the pars intermedia cells of rats and mice. Zeitschrift fur Zellforschung und mikroskopische Anatomie (Vienna, Austria: 1948) 142, 305–328 (1973).
Park, J. J. & Loh, Y. P. How peptide hormone vesicles are transported to the secretion site for exocytosis. Molecular endocrinology (Baltimore, Md.) 22, 2583–2595, doi: 10.1210/me.2008-0209 (2008).
Izumi, T., Kasai, K. & Gomi, H. Secretory vesicle docking to the plasma membrane: molecular mechanism and functional significance. Diabetes, obesity & metabolism 9 Suppl 2, 109–117, doi: 10.1111/j.1463-1326.2007.00789.x (2007).
Autiero, M., De Smet, F., Claes, F. & Carmeliet, P. Role of neural guidance signals in blood vessel navigation. Cardiovascular research 65, 629–638, doi: 10.1016/j.cardiores.2004.09.013 (2005).
Killeen, M. T. & Sybingco, S. S. Netrin, Slit and Wnt receptors allow axons to choose the axis of migration. Developmental biology 323, 143–151, doi: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2008.08.027 (2008).
Lafont, C. et al. Cellular in vivo imaging reveals coordinated regulation of pituitary microcirculation and GH cell network function. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107, 4465–4470, doi: 10.1073/pnas.0902599107 (2010).
Acknowledgements
These authors thank Mr Ryuhei Higashi for his technical assistance. This work was supported by JSPS Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) Grant number 26293040 to K.-i.N., K.O., T.K. and A.T. and (C) 15K08165 to K.O.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
M.Y. and K.O. designed the experiments. M.Y., K.O., T.K., A.T., S.H., K.-i.U., S.O., M.M. and K.-i.N. performed the experiments. M.Y., K.O., T.K. and K.-i.N. analysed the data. M.Y. prepared the figures. M.Y., K.O., T.K. and K.-i.N. wrote the manuscript. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Electronic supplementary material
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Yoshitomi, M., Ohta, K., Kanazawa, T. et al. Three-dimensional ultrastructural analyses of anterior pituitary gland expose spatial relationships between endocrine cell secretory granule localization and capillary distribution. Sci Rep 6, 36019 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep36019
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep36019
This article is cited by
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.