Jump to content

Ultimopharyngeal body

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by NihlusBOT (talk | contribs) at 20:46, 12 February 2018 (Bot: removing deprecated anatomy infobox parameters (Task 11)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Ultimobranchial body
Details
Precursorfourth pharyngeal pouch
Gives rise toparafollicular cells
Identifiers
Latincorpus ultimopharyngeum
MeSHD014460
TEbody_by_E5.4.2.0.0.1.21 E5.4.2.0.0.1.21
Anatomical terminology

The ultimopharyngeal body or ultimobranchial body or ultimobranchial gland is a small organ found in the neck region of many animals.

In humans, the ultimobranchial body is an embryological structure that gives rise to the calcitonin-producing cells—also called parafollicular cells or C cells—of the thyroid gland. In humans, this body is a derivative of the ventral recess of the fourth pharyngeal pouch[1] (technically fifth, but that one is rudimentary and merges with the fourth). The cells that give rise to the parafollicular cells are actually derivatives of the ectoderm (neural crest). These cells migrate and associate with the ultimopharyngeal body during development. Failure of development of ultimobranchial body is seen in DiGeorge syndrome.

References