ISSN:
1432-0878
Keywords:
Key words: Retina
;
Photoreceptor cells
;
Megamitochondria
;
Morphogenesis
;
Reconstruction
;
3-D
;
Tree shrew
;
Tupaia belangeri (Scandentia)
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
Notes:
Abstract. The morphogenesis of the megamitochondria in the retinal cones of prenatal, young postnatal and adult tree shrews (Tupaia belangeri) was studied by transmission electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction techniques. The initial assembly of the supranuclear cone mitochondria and their subsequent migration towards the developing inner segment conform to the morphogenetic pattern known from other mammals. Within the first postnatal week, however, a marked increase in both the number of the cristae and the matrix density occurs in the inner segment mitochondria of Tupaia. These mitochondria then grow, initially exhibiting a basal-to-apical size-gradient. In the 17-day-old Tupaia, this gradient is superseded by a radial size-gradient that, in addition to the single apical megamitochondrion, is characteristically found in the adult Tupaia. The number of megamitochondria remains almost constant from day 12 of postnatal ontogenesis to the adult stage. Each megamitochondrion consists of an apically located body from which several long processes project towards the base of the inner segment. In the older stages, the number of small mitochondria that most probably have budded off from the megamitochondrial processes clearly increases. We consider that megamitochondria in the cone inner segments of Tupaia arise by the growth of a single mitochondrion and not by the fusion of smaller mitochondria.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s004410050614
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