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Glands of Bowman

Olfactory glands
Gray857.png
Section of the olfactory mucous membrane.
Details
System Olfactory system
Identifiers
Latin glandulae olfactoriae
TA A15.1.00.003
TH H3.05.00.0.00026
FMA 77659
Anatomical terminology
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Olfactory glands, also known as Bowman's glands are situated in the olfactory mucosa, beneath the olfactory epithelium, in the lamina propria, a connective tissue also containing fibroblasts, blood vessels, and bundles of fine axons from the olfactory neurons.

An olfactory gland consists of an acinus in the lamina propria and a secretory duct going out through the olfactory epithelium.

Electron microscopy studies show that olfactory glands contain cells with large secretory vesicles. Olfactory glands secrete the gel-forming mucin MUC5AC(UniProtKB: P98088). Olfactory glands might secrete proteins such as lysozyme, amylase and IgA similarly to serous glands. The exact composition of the secretions from olfactory glands is unclear, but there is evidence that they produce odorant binding protein.

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 996 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)



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