respiratory system – NIH Director's Blog (original) (raw)

Snapshots of Life: Picturing the Developing Windpipe

Posted on February 2nd, 2017 by Dr. Francis Collins

Mouse trachea

Randee Young and Xin Sun, University of Wisconsin–Madison

The image above shows a small section of the trachea, or windpipe, of a developing mouse. Although it’s only about the diameter of a pinhead at this stage of development, the mouse trachea has a lot in common structurally with the much wider and longer human trachea. Both develop from a precisely engineered balance between the flexibility of smooth muscle and the supportive strength and durability of cartilage.

Here you can catch a glimpse of this balance. C-rings of cartilage (red) wrap around the back of the trachea, providing the support needed to keep its tube open during breathing. Attached to the ends of the rings are dark shadowy bands of smooth muscles, which are connected to a web of nerves (green). The tension supplied by the muscle cells is essential for proper development of those neatly organized cartilage rings.

Posted In: Health, Science

Tags: airways, cartilage, cartilage rings, congenital tracheomalacia, development, FASEB Bioart 2016, mineralized tissue, muscle, pulmonary disease, rare disease, respiratory system, smooth muscle, trachea, trachea development, upper airway, windpipe