Abstract
The location in time and space of the terminal mitoses of type I and type II sensory hair cells (HCI and HCII) of the developing crista ampullaris in rat lateral semicircular canal and macula utriculi was determined by radioautographs of specimens exposed to tritiated thymidine from the 13th to the 20th day of gestation. Qualitative analysis and statistical treatment of the percentages of labeled HCI and HCII show that the terminal mitoses occur first in the macula utriculi with a maximum percentage of the 14th day of gestation, for the HCI, and on the 15th day of gestation, for the HCII. In the lateral crista, the maximum percentage of labeled HCI occurs on the 17th and 18th day of gestation and on the 19th day of gestation for the HCII. A spatial distribution of this labeling activity is also described: the older cells are located at the top of the crista and at the level of the striola of the macula utriculi while the younger cells are found at the bottom of the crista and on the sides of the utricle. A study of the vestibular receptors in the fetuses shows that synaptic contacts already exist on the 18th day of gestation in the macula utriculi at the level of the striola and on the 19th day at the top of the crista; the cells situated on the periphery are still immature. The first hair cells to undergo their terminal mitoses are, therefore, connected first. These results also suggest that the two types of cells are genetically programmed and that the HCI start functioning first during the development of the labyrinth.