Abstract
Salivary glands and pancreases from male rats were stained with a battery of ten different lectin-horseradish peroxidase conjugates. Qualitative and quantitative differences were observed in the content of terminal sugar residues in stored secretory glycoproteins in parenchymal cells of glands having a similar histological structure. Heterogeneity in the content of secretory glycoconjugates was also found between cells in the same exocrine glands, which were previously thought to be identical on the basis of classical morphological and histochemical staining studies. Similar differences were observed in the structure of glycoconjugates associated with the apical surface of epithelial cells lining glandular excretory ducts. Intercalated ducts presented a gland specific staining pattern different from that of the glandular secretory cell population, whereas striated duct and interlobular duct epithelial cells stained similarly in all major rat exocrine glands. A comparison of lectin binding patterns in identical histological sites in the mouse, reported in a companion paper, is provided, and the similarities and differences between these two rodent species are discussed. In addition to providing valuable information concerning the localization and structure of tissue complex carbohydrates, a comparison of staining in the same tissue sites with labelled lectins reported biochemically to have similar binding specificity has revealed interesting differences in the binding specificity of these macromolecules.