Histology of the Hepatopancreas of Puffer Fish (takifugu Rubripes) in Relation to the Localization of Tetrodotoxin
Archives of histology and cytology(2013)
Abstract
The “liver” of puffer fish had both a hepatic portion and a pancreatic portion. The hepatic portion had the parenchyma and the portal area as mammalian livers such as human or mouse or rat. However, the hepatic lobule was not obvious histologically in the puffer liver. In the hepatic parenchyma, both parenchymal cells (hepatocytes) and non-parenchymal cells such as liver sinusoidal endothelial cells and hepatic stellate cells (vitamin A-storing cells, Ito cells) were demonstrated to exist. Cytoplasm of the parenchymal cells was filled with large fat droplets, namely, the liver was in steatosis, but neither hepatic fibrosis nor liver cirrhosis was identified. In the pancreatic portion, pancreatic acinar cells containing
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