On the stalks of certain peritrichs

The stalks of peritrich protozoa have aroused great interest for many years and for many reasons. Some are contractile, some are not. This attribute of contractility, first observed by Leeuwenhoek in Vorticella and published in this journal in 1676, is one good reason for further studies of a structural, cytochemical and physiological character. This paper is mainly concerned with matters of fine structure which relate not only to the mechanism of contraction in those stalks that behave in this way, but also to wider problems of morphogenesis in ciliates. The early literature of this subject is clouded with optical artifact and one of the first problems to be solved is the precise difference between non-contractile and contractile stalks. Seven families are now included in the suborder Sessilina of the Peritrichida and members of the Epistylididae and the Vorticellidae have been selected for this investigation. This choice has made possible a detailed comparative study of fine structure in the non-contractile stalks of the first group and the contractile ones of the second. All stalks possess longitudinally arranged structures. In the non-contractile stalks these structures are tubular in form and may be observed in the phase-contrast microscope. In the contractile stalks the longitudinal structures are of two main kinds, one of which is confined to the annulus and the other to an inner canal separated from the annulus by a membrane. The annular structures are tubular and numerous in Carchesium and Zoothamnium and transversely striated, while in Vorticella they are composed of unstriated fibres, few in number. The structure within the canal is the main feature that distinguishes the stalks of Vorticellidae from those of Epistylididae. It consists of a long bundle of closely packed fine fibrils and is to be identified with the stalk spasmoneme or myoneme of the older literature. Only one type of fibril has been observed in the spasmonemes and present facts are not consistent with the idea that they contract in the same way as muscles. The spasmoneme is protein in nature with positive indications of the presence of —NH 2 , S—H, and S—S groups. The annular structure in the Vorticellidae and the tubular structures of Epistylididae have cytochemical affinities with the keratin group of proteins. Structurally, they grow out as the stalk develops from an assembly of organelles known collectively as the scopula. In the contractilia the spasmoneme passes into the zooid through a more or less central gap in the scopula and terminates in the form of a circular fan of fibrils on or close to the zooid pellicle. The fine structure of the stalk tubules of the Epistylididae has been investigated in some detail, particularly for one species of Epistylis. In Epistylis and Opercularia the tubules are transversely striated in a manner similar to that described for Carchesium and Zoothamnium . In Campanella each tubule consists of a loose helix of fibrils interlocked with those of neighbouring tubules. The form of attachment of the tubules of Epistylis and Opercularia to the scopula organelles has been determined. Wherever the preparations were of sufficient quality a comparison has been made of scopula organelles and the corresponding and possibly homologous structures of normal cilia known as basal bodies or kinetosomes. There are similarities and, of course, differences. It seems justifiable to regard the scopula organelles as basal bodies modified in the course of the evolution of this Order for the purpose of contributing a degree of structural stability and rigidity to the stalks. No such obvious ‘origin’ for the spasmoneme has been found in the adult organisms. This illustrates the danger and perhaps sterility of attempts to link the genesis of one structure to another on purely morphological grounds. The role of the scopula organelles and in a wider context kinetosomes in the organization and possibly the synthesis of fibrous proteins is discussed.

Development ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-255
Author(s):  
J. B. Gurdon ◽  
R. A. Laskey

Two methods of transplanting single nuclei from monolayers of cultured cells to unfertilized eggs of Xenopus laevis are described, illustrated, and tested. The detached-cell method is simpler and quicker to operate and is suitable for homogeneous populations of cells which are easily removed from the substrate on which they are growing. The other, attached-cell, method is technically more elaborate, but is applicable to cells whose properties can be individually determined under the phase-contrast microscope and to cells which are not readily dissociated from other cells or from their substrate.


Parasitology ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 625-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen M. Lyons

The fine structure of two kinds of compound presumed sense organs from the heads of three skin parasitic monogeneans Gyrodactylus sp. Entobdella soleae (larva only) and Acanthocotyle elegans is described. One kind of compound receptor consists of a number of associated sensilla, each ending in a single cilium (the spike sensilla of Gyrodactylus and the cone sensilla of E. soleae oncomiracidium).The other kind of compound organ is made up of one or a few neurones only, each of which bears many cilia (pit organs of E. soleae oncomiracidium and feeding organ sensilla of Acanthocotyle elegans). The spike sensilla of Gyrodactylus have also been studied using a Cambridge Instrument Co. Stereoscan electron microscope and by phase-contrast microscopy. The ciliary endings of all these sense organs are highly modified and have lost the 9 + 2 structure, being packed with many fibres. The fibre arrangement in the cilia of the cone sensillae of E. soleae oncomiracidium and the feeding organ sensilla of A. elegans has been compared with that in the ciliary endings of other invertebrate mechano- and chemoreceptors. The possibility that the spike sensilla of Gyrodactylus may be chemoreceptors has been discussed but it is considered premature to attempt to assign functions to the other sense organs studied. Electron dense membrane-bound inclusions occurring specifically in the nerves supplying the spike sensilla of Gyrodactylus may be neurosecretory.


Author(s):  
Gareth Thomas

The world of materials is a world of interfaces. Indeed many technologically significant materials have properties both physical and mechanical which are determined by the structure, composition, and bonding of the interfaces within these materials. Thus, electron microscopy and microanalysis, with its high resolution and specificity of information, is one of the key methods needed for characterization. Imaging can be done by amplitude contrast but is limited by the factor g • R (where R is a displacement vector), or resolution in phase contrast, and in today's modern instruments atomic arrangements can be imaged directly, both in plan and cross-sectional views. Beautiful examples are now being published. However so far, few developments to utilize this information for materials design have been forthcoming. On the other hand, interface or intergranular phases are very important in many metallurgical and ceramic systems. In fact many materials are composites of one kind or another and composites involving intergranular phases are an important group of such materials.


1967 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack L. Pate ◽  
John L. Johnson ◽  
Erling J. Ordal

When cells of C. columnaris were broken open, treated with PTA, and examined in the electron microscope, tubular structures (rhapidosomes) were present in the preparations. The rhapidosomes are approximately 300 A in diameter. Their length varies from about 500 to about 15,000 A. An axial hole which runs the length of the rhapidosomes appears to widen and narrow with a regular periodicity. End-on views of short segments of rhapidosomes revealed the presence of subunits around their outside peripheries. The results of studies of lysed cells and of sectioned cells indicate that the rhapidosomes are produced during the disintegration of cells. It seems likely that the compound membranes of the mesosomes break down to give rise to the tubular structures. The mesosomal origin of rhapidosomes is postulated only for the rhapidosomes of C. columnaris, since the origin of rhapidosomes from other organisms was not investigated during this study. The rhapidosomes of C. columnaris may be unrelated to those of S. grandis, S. myxococcoides, A. violaceum, and Sorangium 495, since there was a difference in the details of fine structure between rhapidosomes from C. columnaris and those found in the other four organisms.


Author(s):  
Janice E. Kuster

The fine structure of photopic eucone eyes of Cicindela tranquebarica adults was examined using cryofracture SEM, TEM, and freeze-etch techniques. A “subcorneal layer” can be distinguished between the corneal lens and crystalline cone. In surface view (Fig. 1) this layer consists of concave polygons (po). It has parabolic lamellae (lm) of endocuticle consisting of microfibrils (mf) having a chitin core with protein deposits along their lengths (Fig. 2). Two primary pigment cells (lp) are devoid of pigment granules, but are rich in rough endoplasmic reticulum (rer) and surround a crystalline thread (ct) (Fig. 3). Extensions of the crystalline thread form inter-retinular fibers (f) containing microtubules between retinula cells 1/2, 3/4, 5/6, and 7/1 (Figs. 4, 5).Distal to each retinula cell nucleus are two basal bodies (bb), one perpendicular to the other (Fig. 4). The proximal body extends two fibrillar feet which fuse to form a horizontally banded ciliary rootlet which extends the retinula length peripheral to the rhabdom.


1956 ◽  
Vol s3-97 (39) ◽  
pp. 369-377
Author(s):  
VISHWA NATH ◽  
BRIJ L. GUPTA

In this paper are embodied our observations on the morphology, origin, and role of the Golgi bodies in the spermatogenesis of the slug, Anadenus altivagus, and the snail, Euaustenia cassida. Living cells have been studied under the phase-contrast microscope and photomicrographed. In the juxta-nuclear Golgi region in primary spermatocytes the Golgi bodies exist in the form of (1) granules and rods of dark contrast, (2) spheres of pale contrast, and (3) spheroids showing a duplex structure, each consisting of a sphere of pale contrast and an incomplete or complete cortex or sheath of dark contrast. The Golgi spheroids have been shown to arise three times in the course of spermatogenesis from the mitochondrial granules by a process of alignment. The acrosome is formed from a cap of tiny acrosomal granules, which are deposited in front of the spermatid nucleus by the Golgi bodies (acroblasts).


Blood ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 6 (11) ◽  
pp. 1173-1198 ◽  
Author(s):  
CH. GRÉGOIRE

Abstract 1. Thin films of freshly drawn hemolymph of about 360 insects belonging to 61 different species were observed under the phase contrast microscope and the process of coagulation investigated. Control of the observations by motion picture recordings were performed in a few species. 2. In the hemolymph of all the insects investigated, a category of hyaline hemocytes can easily be recognized under the phase contrast microscope from the other kinds of blood cells. Attempts of identification of these hyaline hemocytes with elements described in the classifications of insect blood cells based on fixation and staining were inconclusive. 3. In the insects in which the blood clotting does not occur, these hyaline hemocytes do not exhibit any important alteration. In species inn which blood coagulation occurs, the cells of this category appear to be highly labile to contact to glass surfaces. They undergo rapid modifications in their structure which play an important if not exclusive part in the initiation of the plasma coagulation. In the present material these alterations are of two kinds, each of them being related to a different appearance of the plasma reaction. They can occur alone or together. 4. In contrast to the hyaline hemocytes, the other categories of blood cells do not take part in the process of coagulation. Scattered or agglutinated at random, they are passively embedded in the coagulum. 5. In the present material, hemolymph coagulation appears to be a continuous process, initiated by alterations taking place in a single category of hemocytes. These alterations are followed by various degrees of plasma coagulation, from a general macroscopic clotting to a limited reaction detectable only under the microscope. 6. The results are at variance with former data in which the coagulation of insect blood was described as being either a cellular agglutination, in which no special part was recognized to be played by a special category of cells, or a plasma coagulation, both considered as two physiologically distinct processes, which can occur independently or together. On the other hand, the present results show an analogy with the type of coagulation described in crustacean blood by Hardy, Tait, Tait and Gunn, in which a special category of cells, Hardy's explosive cells, as distinguished from the other blood cells, has a specific and important part to play.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 75-83
Author(s):  
Sunarto Sunarto ◽  
Sutaryo Sutaryo

According to WHO thrombocytopenia is one of the diagnostic criteria of DHF. On the other hand many studies have reported DHF cases without evidence of thrombocytopenia. One hundred fifty nine DHF out of485 suspected cases were assessed for their platelet counts. Diagnosis of DHF was established based on the WHO criteria, and confirmed by the hemagglutination inhibition test. The platelet counts were done serially and intensively by phase contrast microscope from the first day of hospitalization until the patient's discharge. In 77 patients thrombocytopenia appeared for the first time during hospitalization. Mild thrombocytopenia appeared in almost all of these cases before thrombocyte count of 100,000 reached. Seventy two patients had shown thrombocytopenia on the day of admission. No thrombocytopenia was found on the second day of illness, the earliest time of the detection of thrombocytopenia was on the Jrri and the latest was on the 8th day of illness. Thrombocytopenia lasted 1-5 days. It is concluded that many DHF diagnosis would have been missed if the thrombocyte investigation had not been done serially and intensively. Mild thrombocytopenia in DHF suspected patients should call attention to do platelet investigation intensively in those cases.


Author(s):  
E. N. Albert

Silver tetraphenylporphine sulfonate (Ag-TPPS) was synthesized in this laboratory and used as an electron dense stain for elastic tissue (Fig 1). The procedures for the synthesis of tetraphenylporphine sulfonate and the staining method for mature elastic tissue have been described previously.The fine structure of developing elastic tissue was observed in fetal and new born rat aorta using tetraphenylporphine sulfonate, phosphotungstic acid, uranyl acetate and lead citrate. The newly forming elastica consisted of two morphologically distinct components. These were a central amorphous and a peripheral fibrous. The ratio of the central amorphous and the peripheral fibrillar portion changed in favor of the former with increasing age.It was also observed that the staining properties of the two components were entirely different. The peripheral fibrous component stained with uranyl acetate and/or lead citrate while the central amorphous portion demonstrated no affinity for these stains. On the other hand, the central amorphous portion of developing elastic fibers stained vigorously with silver tetraphenylporphine sulfonate, while the fibrillar part did not (compare figs 2, 3, 4). Based upon the above observations it is proposed that developing elastica consists of two components that are morphologically and chemically different.


Author(s):  
Alfredo Feria-Velasco ◽  
Guadalupe Tapia-Arizmendi

The fine structure of the Harderian gland has been described in some animal species (hamster, rabbit, mouse, domestic fowl and albino rats). There are only two reports in the literature dealing on the ultrastructure of rat Harderian gland in adult animals. In one of them the author describes the myoepithelial cells in methacrylate-embbeded tissue, and the other deals with the maturation of the acinar cells and the formation of the secretory droplets. The aim of the present work is to analize the relationships among the acinar cell components and to describe the two types of cells located at the perifery of the acini.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document