Cellular structures which help bind epithelium to underlying connective tissue
Skin epithelium (purple) with lamina propria (underlying connective tissue) (pink) -- the epithelium exhibits rete pegs. Rete pegs protect the tissue from shearing.[ 1]
Rete pegs (also known as rete processes or rete ridges ) are the epithelial extensions that project into the underlying connective tissue in both skin and mucous membranes .
In the epithelium of the mouth, the attached gingiva exhibit rete pegs, while the sulcular [ 2] and junctional epithelia do not.[ 3] Scar tissue lacks rete pegs and scars tend to shear off more easily than normal tissue as a result.[ 1]
Also known as papillae , they are downward thickenings of the epidermis between the dermal papillae .
^ a b Ira D. Papel (2011). Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (Third ed.). USA: Thieme Medical Publishers. p. 7. ISBN 9781588905154 .
^ Itoiz, ME; Carranza, FA: The Gingiva. In Newman, MG; Takei, HH; Carranza, FA; editors: Carranza’s Clinical Periodontology , 9th Edition. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company, 2002. pages 23.
^ Page, RC; Schroeder, HE. "Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Periodontal Disease: A Summary of Current Work." Lab Invest 1976;34(3):235-249