Abstract:
Camel glandular sac areas were previously considered as water stores.
Recently these sacs are found to be glandular areas which probably perform
absorption, fermentation and secretion functions. This investigation which was
conducted on thirty five adult camels and ten camel fetuses which were collected
from Tamboul slaughterhouse during the period 2|2013 – 2|2014, aimed to study
the morphology (gross anatomy, histology, ultrastructure, histometry) and
histochemistry of camel glandular sacs.
The camel stomach was composed of four compartments; compartment 1,
compartment 2, compartment 3, and compartment 4. Compartment 1 which was
the largest extended from the diaphragm to the caudal border of the 12 th thoracic
rib and presented glandular (cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs) and non-glandular
areas. The cranioventral sac was oval in shape with more or less smooth external
surface. The caudodorsal sac was irregular in shape and it was larger and more
sacculated. Compartment 2 was small and bean-shaped and smaller than
compartment 1. Compartment 3 was long and tubular. Compartment 4 was bean-
shaped and smaller than compartment 3 and divided into fundic and pyloric
regions.
Compartment one contained both non glandular and glandular regions.
Cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs formed the glandular region of compartment 1;
they contained glandular pits. The four walls of each pit were formed by two
longitudinal and two transverse pillars which surrounded the pit floor. The pit
walls and floor consisted of four tunics; mucosa, submucosa, muscularis and
serosa. The pit wall mucosa was non-glandular and lined by keratinized stratified
squamous epithelium; the floor mucosa contained serous secreting glands which
were lined by simple columnar epithelium. The mucosa of compartment 2 was
IIImainly glandular and the glands opened in shallow pits and lined by simple
columnar epithelium. The mucosae of compartment 3 and 4 were glandular.
No significant histometric differences were observed between the cranioventral
and caudodorsal sacs in the glandular size and thickness of wall tunics.
In scanning electron microscopy the surface of the glandular region of
cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs was folded and contained cup-shaped, cap-
shaped and flower-shaped glands. In transmission electron microscopy the
glandular columnar cells of cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs were closely
packed together and contained Golgi apparatus, dense bodies and numerous
secretory granules especially in the apical cytoplasm.
The glandular epithelial cells of cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs showed
strong positive PAS reaction; glycogen digestion was detected in glandular tissue.
Blue cells, red cells and purple cells were also observed in the glands following
PAS and AB reactions. Alkaline phosphatase reaction was positive in glandular
tissue of cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs especially in the luminal parts of
epithelial cells.
The results revealed no significant differences between the morphology of
cranioventral and caudodorsal sacs except that the pits of cranioventral sacs were
larger than those of caudodorsal. Histochemically, these sacs are suggested to
secrete neutral mucopolysacharides. In addition, some cells secrete both neutral
and acid mucopolysacharides and others showed glycogen in some glandular
tissue.