The epidermal setae and the spinules of the digital lamellae of anoline and gekkonid lizards are shed periodically along with the rest of the outer layer of the skin. These structures are developed within the lamellae prior to ecdysis. The setae are larger and more complicated than the spinules and begin their development first. The setae of Anolis start as aggregations of tonofibrils beneath the plasma membrane of the presumptive Oberhautchen cells. These cells are arranged in rows parallel to the surface, several cell layers beneath the alpha layer of the skin. The developing setae protrude into the clear layer cells as finger‐like projections, with the tonofibrils longitudinally oriented in the direction of growth. About 100 setae are formed by each Oberhautchen cells in Anolis. In late development, the clear layer cells lose their cellular contents and when shed along with all distal cells, retain a template of the new setae or spinules. The spinules and setae are formed before the fibrous and alpha layers of the new skin. The fibrous layer, which occurs only on the ventral (outer) layer of the lamellae, and the Oberhautchen with its setae and spinules, is considered the beta layer. The alpha layer, which occurs adjacent to the fibrous layer on the ventral surface and adjacent to the Oberhautchen on the dorsal (inner) surface, is morphologically identical to that of mammalian α keratin. The shed lizard skin consists of the alpha and beta layers as well as the degenerating cells of the outer epidermal generation, and the clear layer. The clear layer that is shed shows the template of the new setae and spinules developed in the new skin layer. The separation of the new from the old skin occurs along the intercellular space between the clear layer cells and the new Oberhautchen. The alpha layer of the skin is not fully keratinized at shedding. The setae of the digital lamellae of lizards represent unique epidermal structures — intracellular keratinized microstructures.
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