Changes in the ovine mammary gland epithelium during initiated
involution
were studied by light and
electron microscopy. Apoptosis of the duct and alveolar epithelial cells
was first
identified at 2 d after
weaning, reached a peak at 4 d and then progressed gradually thereafter.
Apoptotic
cells were phagocytosed
by intraepithelial macrophages and alveolar epithelial cells. Occasional
apoptotic
epithelial cells were
observed in the alveolar and duct lumina. The highly vacuolated cells in
the
alveolar and duct lumina were
confirmed to be macrophages as they were CD45+,
MHC class II+. Changes in myoepithelial cells involved
shrinkage and extension of cytoplasmic processes into the underlying stroma
and
no apoptosis was
observed. Regression of the blood capillaries was also by apoptosis. The
resulting
apoptotic bodies were
either taken up by adjacent endothelial cells or were shed into the capillary
lumen to be phagocytosed later
by mural endothelial cells or blood monocytes. The mammary glands were
completely
involuted by 30 d
after weaning. It was concluded that the mammary gland involutes by apoptosis,
a process which allows
deletion of cells without the loss of the basic architecture and the integrity
of the epithelial lining of the gland.