Fetal development of chromogranin A-positive gastrointestinal endocrine cells revisited: a histological study using human fetuses
- Author:
Ji Hyun KIM
1
;
Zhe-Wu JIN
;
Eri MIYAMOTO
;
Sakiko TAKAHASHI
;
Sayako SUZUKI
;
Gen MURAKAMI
;
Shin-ichi ABE
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- From:Anatomy & Cell Biology 2026;59(1):82-93
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: Initial gastrointestinal endocrine cells (GIECs) likely appear at the proximal and distal sites of abdominal intestines and may take a close topographical relation with neural elements in the gut. We examined immunohistochemically-stained sections from 10 fetuses at approximately 8–18 weeks of gestational age (36–155 mm of crown-rump length). Irrespective of whether physiological herniation was present (early 5 specimens) or absent (the other 5), the duodenum and jejunum had well-developed mucosa with villi containing abundant flask-like chromogranin-positive cells. In the earlier 5 specimens, the rectum, standing up to a level of the umbilicus, had a lumen and villi with a few positive cells, but the colon carried neither the lumen or chromogranin-positive cells. The initial GIECs seemed to appear in the basal payer of the epithelium at the distal and proximal foci depending on double pathways of neural crest cell migration. Less number of the colic chromograninpositive cells, more than 5-times difference in density relative to small intestine, was seen in the larger 5 specimens. The appearance of GIECs was delayed at the anal transitional zone (a border area between the columnar and squamous epithelia).The reactivity of neuronal nitric oxide synthase was restricted in the myenteric plexus, whereas clusters of slender calretininpositive cells existed in the lamina propria or core of villi in the duodenum and colon. Relatively small, round or oval positive cells were also seen in the basal layer of the columnar epithelium. Therefore, calretinin-positive cells might exist closely to GIECs in the developing villi.
