Welling L W, Welling D J
Laboratory and Medical Research Services, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Kansas City 64128.
J Electron Microsc Tech. 1988 Jun;9(2):171-85. doi: 10.1002/jemt.1060090205.
Epithelia which support large transepithelial fluid movements are generally found to have histologic specializations which increase the surface areas of the cell membranes across which flows occur. A relationship between structure and function seems obvious in those cases. On the other hand, the area increasing specializations may also result in complicated shapes for the cells and their adjacent intercellular channels. In this paper we review the means for examining cell shape by quantitative stereologic techniques and the results obtained for the epithelium of the proximal renal tubule. We conclude that cell shape not only is a critical ingredient in any structure-function correlation for that tissue but also a "fingerprint" and a powerful tool with which one can predict and study epithelial absorptive flows and their driving forces.