• 1 January 1977
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 86 (1), 17-30
Abstract
The pathogenesis of a spontaneously occurring exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI) syndrome in CBA/J mice was studied at the ultrastructural level. Initial cytologic manifestations of this syndrome are seen as a progressive digestion of the zymogen granules, beginning at the periphery and proceeding toward the granule interior. Granule membrane breakdown, fusion of neighboring granules, and a release of zymogen contents into the cytoplasm are frequently observed in later stages; in some cases the entire granule contents appear digested before membrane breakdown is observed. In either case, pathologic changes are subsequently observed in mitochondria and rough endoplasmic reticulum. Remnants of lysed cells are then engulfed by invading macrophages, and infiltration by fat cells is observed. Secretory ducts and islets of Langerhans show no pathologic changes even after total autolysis of the exocrine pancreas. Morphologic evidence showing zymogen granule destabilization, indicates that intracellular autodigestion is the mechanism of exocrine cell death.