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Lingual Papillae & Taste Bud Histology

Lingual Papillae & Taste Bud Histology

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Lingual papillae of the Tongue
Lingual papillae cover 2/3rds of its anterior surface; lingual tonsils cover its posterior surface.
There are three types of lingual papillae:
    • Filiform, fungiform, and circumvallate; a 4th type, called foliate papillae, are rudimentary in humans.
    • Surface comprises stratified squamous epithelia
    • Core comprises lamina propria (connective tissue and vasculature)
    • Skeletal muscle lies deep to submucosa; skeletal muscle fibers run in multiple directions, allowing the tongue to move freely.
    • Taste buds lie within furrows or clefts between papillae; each taste bud comprises precursor, immature, and mature taste receptor cells and opens to the furrow via a taste pore.
Distinguishing Features:
Filiform papillae
  • Most numerous papillae
  • Their role is to provide a rough surface that aids in chewing via their keratinized, stratified squamous epithelia, which forms characteristic spikes.
  • They do not have taste buds.
Fungiform papillae
  • "Fungi" refers to its rounded, mushroom-like surface, which is covered by stratified squamous epithelium.
Circumvallate papillae
  • Are also rounded, but much larger and more bulbous.
  • On either side of the circumvallate papillae are wide clefts, aka, furrows or trenches; though not visible in our sample, serous Ebner's glands open into these spaces.
Images:
Histology (Mark Braun, MD, & Indiana University: http://medsci.indiana.edu/c602web/602/c602web/toc.htm; http://www.indiana.edu/~anat215/virtualscope2/start.htm)

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