Pilocarpine elicits the interdental cell secretory activity of the inner ear

1991 
Abstract Subcutaneous injection of pilocarpine in guinea pigs resulted in the following ultrastructural changes: 1) the apical cavities of the interdental cells were filled with a substance indistinguishable from the overlying amorphous layer of the TM; 2) a great number of spherical structures appeared over the limbal portion of the tectorial membrane. In TEM photomicrographs these structures displayed the same appearance as the amorphous layer of the TM and were usually continuous to it; 3) the number of holes that decorate the upper surface of the limbal portion of the TM was dramatically increased and it was found that they connect the endolymphatic space to the apical cavities of the interdental cells; 4) there was an increase in the number of the small extracellular vesicles found in the clear spaces of the tectorial membrane. These facts suggest that pilocarpine stimulates the secretion of the interdental cells, confirming the existence of the secretory processes previously described (Prieto et al., 1990). These findings can be related to the turnover of the TM in the adult animal and, perhaps, to the secretion of some organic compound to the endolymph. We postulate that the actions of pilocarpine on the interdental cells are most probably mediated by the activation of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors in these cells.
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