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  • Metamorphosis  (1)
  • Nemertini  (1)
  • 1970-1974  (2)
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  • 1970-1974  (2)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 117 (1971), S. 212-225 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Sensory cells ; Cilia ; Nemertini
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Die Sinnesorgane des Vorderendes von Linens ruber werden elektronen-mikroskopisch vor allem im Hinblick auf die rezeptorischen Strukturen untersucht. Am Kopfvorderrand liegen zwei Rezeptortypen: Typ 1 ist mit 20–40, Typ 2 nur mit einer Zilie besetzt. Die Seitenwurzeln der Zilien von Typ 1 sind parallel angeordnet. Die Perikarya beider Rezeptoren liegen unterhalb des Epithelverbandes, dessen Großteil von Typ 1 eingenommen wird. In den Kopfspalten finden sich primäre Sinneszellen mit eingesenkten Zilien, deren Membran regelmäßig aufgeschwollen ist. Im Cerebralorgan dominiert ebenfalls eine primäre Sinneszelle, die reichlich efferent innerviert wird. In den Lichtrezeptoren findet sich eine Zilie unter dem distalen Mikrovillisaum. Alle beschriebenen Zilien sind deutlich voneinander und von den Wimpern der Epidermis unterschieden. Sie werden mit den Zilien der Rezeptoren anderer Tiergruppen verglichen.
    Notes: Summary The sensory organs located in the head reagion of the ribbon worm Lineus ruber have been investigated with the electron microscope. Attention has been focussed on the apical cell-structures, which are assumed to be related to sensory functions. At the anterior edge of the head two receptor-types occur: type 1 bears 20–40 apical cilia, type 2 only 1 cilium per cell. The lateral ciliary rootlets of type 1 are oriented strictly parallel. The pericarya of both receptor types of which type 1 is particularly dominant, are situated below the basement lamina of the epithelium. In the cephalic clefts primary sensory cells occur, the cilia of which are invaginated into the apical cytoplasm. Their ciliary membrane exhibits regular inflations. In the cerebral organ also primary sensory cells dominate which receive an abundant efferent nerve supply. In the light receptors only one cilium is to be found below the distal villi. The cilia of the sensory cells and also of the ordinary epidermis cells show individual characteristics not shared by the other types. Their structural peculiarities are compared with those of sensory organs of other groups of animals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Thyroid gland ; Gymnophiona (Amphibia) ; Metamorphosis ; Ultrastructure ; Radioiodide
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Different developmental stages of two species of the genus Ichthyophis have been investigated. In the late embryo the follicular cells of the thyroid gland exhibit various degrees of cytodifferentiation. Well differentiated cells show a polar organization and contain numerous granular inclusions, but a colloid-containing lumen is rare. Most cells at this stage contain large lipid inclusions. In young and older larvae the cells contain well-developed rough ER and Golgi systems, numerous mitochondria, and abundant granular and vesicular inclusions. Tentative identifications were made of primary lysosomes, secondary lysosomes, residual bodies, and two types of small apical vesicles—containing resorbed colloid or transporting material into the follicular lumen. In the larvae the number of apical microvilli is relatively high. The thyroid cells of the older larvae seem to contain more granular and vesicular inclusions than those of the younger larvae. In the adult the size of the follicles greatly increases, the height of the epithelium decreases, microvilli become rare, residual bodies are more frequent, and the small primary lysosomes are replaced by larger ones. Colloid droplets have been found only rarely in the cytoplasm of the thyroid cells of adult animals. In the immediate neighbourhood of the follicular epithelium, profiles of nerve fibres were found in all animals. Radioiodide investigations—measurements of conversion ratio and thyroid uptake factor—show, if compared with the results of corresponding studies in other amphibians, only relatively small differences between the larvae on the one hand and larvae and adults on the other. The absolute counts of the thyroid region are lowest in the adult and highest in the older larvae, shortly before metamorphosis. Furthermore our results indicate, on the basis of four animals tested, that in Ichthyophis the activity of the thyroid gland is temperature dependent. The results in Ichthyophis show that the classical stages of metamorphosis, in other amphibians characterized among other things by different levels of thyroid activity, are very indistinct in this animal.
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