In comparison with the submandibular and the sublingual glands, the parotid develops slowly in the rat. The foetal rudiment appears a day later than that of the submandibular gland and the formation of adenomeres is slower, leading to a more diffusely branched structure. Cytodifferentiation, in the form of traces of mucopolysaccharide in the tubules and terminal buds, begins at, or just before, birth. There is a transitory increase in mucopolysaccharide production for a few days after birth until the presumptive acinar cells become pyramidal in shape with basal nucleus and granular cytoplasm. Amylase activity of the gland begins to rise between the second and third day after birth and reaches the adult level at weaning. That of the submandibular gland remains at the foetal level.

Parotid rudiments were cultivated on a film of agar over a medium of fowl plasma and chick embryo extract. The oxygen in the gas phase of air and 5 % CO2 was increased to 50 % after the first 9 days in vitro. Under these conditions the mass of the rudiments increased tenfold during 18 days cultivation and the initially unbranched rudiment formed adenomeres in which the cytodifferentiation followed the same course as in vivo. The rise in amylase activity of the explants was only slightly delayed compared with that in vivo, suggesting that systemic or environmental factors are not obligatory in the early postnatal development of the rat parotid.

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