Studies on hexactinellid sponges. I. Histology of Rhabdocalyptus dawsoni (Lambe, 1873)

This paper presents results from the first comprehensive study of hexactinellid tissue organization by electron microscopy. It is confirmed that the trabecular tissue of Rhabdocalyptus dawsoni , which constitutes the bulk of the cellular material in the animal, is a syncytium. The dermal membrane and other similar membranes are specialized regions of the trabecular syncytium, as are thickened regions provisionally equated with the ‘cord syncytia’ of Reiswig { Coll. int. Cent. natn. Rech. sclent, no . 291, pp. 173-180 (1979)). Trabecular tissue contributes to the walls of the flagellated chambers and provides the processes that form Reiswig’s secondary reticulum. It is confirmed that choanocytes are absent. The sponge has conventional ‘collar bodies’ (collar, flagellum and basal cytoplasm) but many collar bodies are syncytially interconnected via narrow ‘stolons’, and there are no nuclei in these complexes in the fully differentiated state. It is suggested that collar bodies are dehiscent, and are periodically replaced. A novel feature is the perforate septum, or junctional ‘plug’. Plugs are not specialized portions of the cell membranes of adjacent cells. They are complex, disc-shaped structures, probably Golgi secretion products, which are inserted into syncytial bridges and appear to form a filter or partial barrier limiting translocation of materials between differentially specialized portions of the cytoplasm. In this respect they more closely resemble red algal pit connections than junctions found in animals. Gap junctions are absent in Rhabdocalyptus (and probably in all sponges) but a type of septate junction is described. Plugged junctions occur between elements of the trabecular syncytium and collar bodies, and between the latter and cells termed ‘choanoblasts’, which are probably derived from archaeocytes. A developmental sequence is proposed wherein the collar bodies and their interconnecting stolons are produced as outgrowths from choanoblasts, which may function singly or in syncytial groups during this phase. The cytoplasm is originally continuous throughout these systems, but plugging occurs progressively, leading to segregation of collar body complexes from their mother cells. Plugged junctions are seen between a variety of cells and the trabecular tissues in which they lie. These cells, whose characteristics are described, are archaeocytes, thesocytes, choanoblasts, granulated cells, spherulous cells and gametes. Sclerocytes, however, appear to lack specialized connections with surrounding tissues. As noted by Okada (1928), spicules are produced intracellularly in hexactinellids. Spiculation has not been studied in this investigation, and no details have been obtained on embryos or development. Nerves are absent. The system responsible for impulse conduction is almost certainly the trabecular syncytium. Impulses can probably cross plugged junctions, as pores with internal diameters of about 7 nm are seen in them. There is no reason to suppose that the tissues lining the openings in the body wall or the internal water passages are contractile. Tests with the dermal membrane show that its pores are not contractile. Regulation of water flow is therefore held to be a property of the sum total of the collar body flagella. Phagosomes occur both in collar bodies and in the trabecular syncytium. It is assumed that food particles can be taken up throughout the internal surfaces. Mucus nets span the internal lacunae in some places, but information is sketchy. Mucus strands interconnect the collar microvilli and may assist in particle capture. It is suggested that food breakdown products pass directly from collar bodies to choanoblasts and trabecular issues, crossing junctional plugs, essentially a ‘symplastic’ transport mechanism as found in plants. Archaeocytes are probably immobile and do not appear to be involved in digestion. External transport of nutrients via the mesolamella is probably of minor importance, and this densely collagenous material is probably not a pathway for cell migration. However, bacteria, presumably symbionts, do occur widely in the mesolamella. The paper concludes with a review of the phenomenon of syncytialization in plants and animals. Hexactinellids are considered in the same context and the features that set them apart from all other Porifera are listed.

2017 ◽  
Vol 96 (8) ◽  
pp. 917-923 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Aguayo ◽  
H. Marshall ◽  
J. Pratten ◽  
D. Bradshaw ◽  
J.S. Brown ◽  
...  

Denture-associated stomatitis is a common candidal infection that may give rise to painful oral symptoms, as well as be a reservoir for infection at other sites of the body. As poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) remains the main material employed in the fabrication of dentures, the aim of this research was to evaluate the adhesion of Candida albicans cells onto PMMA surfaces by employing an atomic force microscopy (AFM) single-cell force spectroscopy (SCFS) technique. For experiments, tipless AFM cantilevers were functionalized with PMMA microspheres and probed against C. albicans cells immobilized onto biopolymer-coated substrates. Both a laboratory strain and a clinical isolate of C. albicans were used for SCFS experiments. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and AFM imaging of C. albicans confirmed the polymorphic behavior of both strains, which was dependent on growth culture conditions. AFM force-spectroscopy results showed that the adhesion of C. albicans to PMMA is morphology dependent, as hyphal tubes had increased adhesion compared with yeast cells ( P < 0.05). C. albicans budding mother cells were found to be nonadherent, which contrasts with the increased adhesion observed in the tube region. Comparison between strains demonstrated increased adhesion forces for a clinical isolate compared with the lab strain. The clinical isolate also had increased survival in blood and reduced sensitivity to complement opsonization, providing additional evidence of strain-dependent differences in Candida-host interactions that may affect virulence. In conclusion, PMMA-modified AFM probes have shown to be a reliable technique to characterize the adhesion of C. albicans to acrylic surfaces.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Sargam R. Parate ◽  
Aayushi Chauhan ◽  
Ashish Bodhade ◽  
Alka Dive

Aim: to determine the use of bite marks for human identification by using inter- canine distance and mesio-distal width of maxillary incisors. Introduction: Odontogenic evidence is considered to be the third most precise method of identification of human in forensic sciences. Bite-marks on the body are intentionally made, those found on food particles are usually impractically left by the offender at the scene of crime, these marks are of great importance in identification of the offender. The present study was aimed to determine the use of bitemarks for human identification by using inter-canine distance and mesio-distal width of the maxillary incisors. Materials and Methods: 40 consenting volunteers were included in the study. With the help of autoclaved Vernier calliper, the inter-canine distance and mesio-distal width of maxillary incisors were measured and bite on chocolate (CADBURY 5Star) was taken. Using Vernier calliper, Inter-canine distance and Mesio-distal width (2 maxillary central and 2 lateral incisors), were measured from the bite mark. Both measurements obtained were coded and matching was done by two doubly blinded examiners. Results: The probability of correct identification on the basis of IC distance and MD width obtained from bite-marks is 68.35%. The average proportion of correct matching is 0.78 for IC distance measurement and 0.46 for MD width. Conclusion: Metric method can be used for human identification by using bite-mark. IC distance is more reliable and efficient in human identification than MD width.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 1501-1506
Author(s):  
Bhagat Seema ◽  
Ramamurthy Aku ◽  
Rathore Poonam

An impressive number of thousands of plants have been utilising for the treatment of diseases for thousands of years. Many of them are clearly explained in Ayurveda. In Ayurveda certain drugs manifest their action by their Rasa (taste); some by their Virya (potency) or other qualities, some by Vipaka (biological transformation) and others by their specific action. As per their Raspanchak, some of these drugs possesses an affinity for bala. The drugs that provide Bala (strength) and vitality to the body have been grouped under Balya mahakashaya by Acharya Charak. Bala (strength) plays an important role in the diagnosis and treatment of various diseases. This study aimed to discuss the details of ten Balya Mahakashya drugs based on their Raspanchak i.e Rasa, Guna, Vi- rya, Vipaka and Karma and in relation to Bhavaprakash Nighantu, Dhanwantari Nighantu, Raj Nighantu and Kaiyadev Nighantu. Keywords: Bala, Balya Mahakashaya, Raspanchak, Nighantu.


1998 ◽  
Vol 201 (3) ◽  
pp. 425-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Coelho ◽  
J Prince ◽  
T G Nolen

The marine snail Aplysia californica obtains its purple defensive ink exclusively from the accessory photosynthetic pigment r-phycoerythrin, which is found in the red seaweeds of its diet. The rhodoplast digestive cell, one of three types of cell lining the tubules of the digestive gland, appears to be the site of catabolism of red algal chloroplasts (rhodoplasts) since thylakoid membranes, including phycobilisome-sized membrane-associated particles, were found within the large digestive vacuoles of this cell. Immunogold localization showed that there was a statistically significant occurrence of the red algal phycobilisome pigment r-phycoerythrin within these rhodoplast digestive vacuoles, but not in other compartments of this cell type (endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, nucleus) or in other tissues (abdominal ganglion). Immunogold analysis also suggested that the rhodoplast vacuole is the site for additional modification of r-phycoerythrin, which makes it non-antigenic: the chromophore is either cleaved from its biliprotein or the biliprotein is otherwise modified. The hemolymph had spectrographic absorption maxima typical of the protein-free chromophore (phycoerythrobilin) and/or r-phycoerythrin, but only when the animal had been feeding on red algae. Rhodoplast digestive cells and their vacuoles were not induced by the type of food in the diet: snails fed green seaweed and animals fed lettuce had characteristic rhodoplast cells but without the large membranous inclusions (rhodoplasts) or phycobilisome-like granules found in animals fed red seaweed. Two additional cell types lining the tubules of the digestive gland were characterized ultrastructurally: (1) a club-shaped digestive cell filled with electron-dense material, and (2) a triangular 'secretory' cell devoid of storage material and calcium carbonate. The following model is consistent with our observations: red algal rhodoplasts are freed from algal cells in the foregut and then engulfed by rhodoplast digestive cells in the tubules of the digestive diverticula, where they are digested in membrane-bound vacuoles; r-phycoerythrin is released from phycobilisomes on the rhodoplast thylakoids and chemically modified before leaving the digestive vacuole and accumulating in the hemolymph; the pigment then circulates throughout the body and is concentrated in specialized cells and vesicles of the ink gland, where it is stored until secreted in response to certain predators.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (32) ◽  
pp. 19310-19320
Author(s):  
Maria Brooun ◽  
Alexander Klimovich ◽  
Mikhail Bashkurov ◽  
Bret J. Pearson ◽  
Robert E. Steele ◽  
...  

Fat, Fat-like, and Dachsous family cadherins are giant proteins that regulate planar cell polarity (PCP) and cell adhesion in bilaterians. Their evolutionary origin can be traced back to prebilaterian species, but their ancestral function(s) are unknown. We identified Fat-like and Dachsous cadherins inHydra, a member of phylum Cnidaria a sister group of bilaterian. We foundHydradoes not possess a true Fat homolog, but has homologs of Fat-like (HyFatl) and Dachsous (HyDs) that localize at the apical membrane of ectodermal epithelial cells and are planar polarized perpendicular to the oral–aboral axis of the animal. Using a knockdown approach we found that HyFatl is involved in local cell alignment and cell–cell adhesion, and that reduction of HyFatl leads to defects in tissue organization in the body column. Overexpression and knockdown experiments indicate that the intracellular domain (ICD) of HyFatl affects actin organization through proline-rich repeats. Thus, planar polarization of Fat-like and Dachsous cadherins has ancient, prebilaterian origins, and Fat-like cadherins have ancient roles in cell adhesion, spindle orientation, and tissue organization.


Author(s):  
I. Tekdemir ◽  
◽  
V. Tsvilikhovskyi ◽  

The features of fractional distribution of plasma proteins in rats with Escherichia coli at different stages of infection are established. It was studied the effect of hypobiosis on the proteinogramma under and after artificial sleep too. Artificial hypobiosis is important for therapeutic use at bacterial infection and proteinogramma is informatively significant as a diagnostic element of the functional changes provoked by a hypobiosis. We used the nephelometric method. Experiments were performed on young rats with Escherichia coli, in a state of hypobiosis and one day after leaving it. It was established the infection provoked changes in plasma proteins such as increasing globulins and decreasing albumin at the beginning of the disease and the opposite trend during the period of total depletion. The introduction of sick animals into a state of hypobiosis causes an increase in nonspecific resistance of the organism level due to an increase in the content of γ-globulin fraction and a decrease in the level of albumin, which increases the survival of animals after removal from hypobiosis. Indicators of the proteinogram of blood of animals that were introduced into the state of hypobiosis at the initial stage of the disease and the stage of progressive symptoms return to control values on the first day after the elimination of hypobiosis factors. Further research should be aimed at a comprehensive study of functional changes in the body according to the proposed model.


2011 ◽  
pp. 197-216
Author(s):  
Jasna Vlajic-Popovic

This paper presents a pilot version of a more comprehensive study on Greek loanwords in Serbian vernaculars which will deal with their identification, distribution, periodisation, and adaptation. The materials excerpted from the presently existing dialectal dictionaries will be compared with the data from three classical sources on the topic: VASMER, POPOVIC 1953-1955, and SKOK. In this phase our goal was to find out whether there is any point in proceeding with the study of Greek loanwords in Serbian, after the results that have been reached by the three abovementioned authors. Our choice for the pilot analysis is Recnik srpskih govora Vojvodine (RSGV) because of its size, representativeness and actuality: it is the largest single dictionary (ten volumes comprising over 2,000 pages), it has covered the vastests continual territory (at the same time most distant from the line of contact with Greek, and also beyond the borders of the Balkan linguistic unity), it falls in the number of the most up-to-date ones (published in the period 2001 to 2011). The paper offers not just a linear inventory of Grecisms from RSGV, but a classification of types of divergencies from the standard body of Grecisms. It features primarily novelties - be they represented by new words (ponomarh ?cleric?, mironisati ?to pray in the church?, parasnik ?unruly person?), by new semantics (buklijas ?horse ridden by the man who carries buklija?, Grk ?shopkeeper?, katarka ?long pole onto which knife for cutting the fishing-net is poised?, kolaba ?structure for drying meat in the attic?, kondir ?bucket for cattle; mode of cutting wine?, krevet ?laundry; chair; the lower layer of sheaves in a stook?, liman ?underwater source?, mira ?extract produced by cooking large amounts of fish in little water, used as an additon to fish-stew?, paripa ?horse farm?), by new formation (krevetnjaca ?a solid piece of wood fencing a straw-mattress?, limaniti ?to make a whirlpool?, talasnjaca ?rigging (on the boat)?, sulundariti se ?to precipitate?), by new phonetics (ararh : jerarh, bukrijas : buklijas, kolaba : koliba, mengule : mengele, raoma/revoma/reoma /roma : reuma, tridofla /trndofl/trndofli/trandofil : trandafil, celerak : ciler), as well as certain archaisms (disage ?saddlebags?, koram ?belly?, trpan ?sickle, pruning hook?; parasiti (se) ?to give up, stop doing something?, komat ?piece of bread?, pironj ?big nail?; dgunja ?quince?, sektembar ?September?), and some semantic rarities (kutlaca ?cooking spoon?, litanija ?scolding?, mengule ?troubles?, psaltirac ?pupil who studies psaltir?, trpeznik ?tablecloth?). Since the body of some two hundred Grecisms in RSGV contains not only a number of them with considerable phonetic, formative and semantic shifts, but also some rarely or nowhere registered words or meanings, it can be expected that in more Southern parts of the Serbian language territory such finds will be even more abundant. Therefore, it can be concluded that it certainly does make sense to proceed with studying Greek loanwords in Serbian vernaculars in future.


2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (2(66)) ◽  
pp. 48-52
Author(s):  
Z. Guta

The article deals with the influence of fumonisins on morphological and biochemical indices of rats blood. 20 rats weighing 165-170 g were used in the experiment. It was formed two groups: first group of animals - served as a control, in the second experimental group – chronic fumonisin toxicosis  was reproduced. Rats were daily injected with intra- gastro intestinal 90 mg of fumonisin per one animal. It was established that after the introduction of fumonisin to rats, mycotoxins have a negative impact on the morphological indices of rats blood. It wass found a probable increase in the number of leukocytes to 18.9 g/l, the number of eosinophils to 6.7% segmented neutrophils to 30.7%, and also the decrease in the number of lymphocytes and monocytees to 56.0 and 0.7%. In the analysis of leukocyte formula we have noted the tendency to displacement the nucleus left.Reactions that occur on the background of  the above mentioned toxicity,caused by selective tropism for various tissues of the body; as a result there are nefro-, hepato- and nephrotoxic reactions.To diagnose these changes is possible  after a comprehensive study on the basis of biochemical changes. At research of biochemical parameters in rats blood by the development of chronic fumonisin toxicosis  it was set the reduction of  the level of total protein; indicating the development of violations of proteins exchange in rats organism and protein synthesized liver function.Also it was found that under the conditions of  fumonisin toxicosis  in rats, alanine -aminotransferase activity and aspartate- aminotransferase in their blood throughout the experiment was increased.This is explained by increased permeability of cells under the influence of fumonisin that influenced directly on the membrane, probably, disrupting their structural components. The concentration of creatinine and urea in the blood of experimental rats which were  fed with fumonisin, exceeded the physiological values that were clinical sign of the development of inflammation in rats organism.On the 14th  day the phagocytic activity of neutrophils and phagocytic index of rat blood affected by fumonisin was reduced, indicating the availability of such changes in the immune system of animals.


1960 ◽  
Vol s3-101 (53) ◽  
pp. 9-18
Author(s):  
S. H. CHUANG

The gut of Crania anomala has been studied morphologically and histochemically. It is attached to the body-wall by dorsal and ventral mesenteries with the exception of the posterior part of the intestine, which lies free in the right half of the visceral cavity. The gut-wall consists of an inner columnar epithelium, a connective-tissue stroma, and an investing squamous mesothelium. The columnar epithelium comprises ordinary epithelial cells, some goblet cells, and occasional phagocytes. The cytoplasmic inclusions of the gut epithelium include pigment granules, glycogen granules, lipochondria, and goblet-cell globules. The lipochondria contain a phospholipid. The goblet-cell globules contain a muco- or glycoprotein, and are extruded into the lumen of the gut presumably for lubrication and for the entanglement of food particles. Extranuclear DNA, presumably originating from the nucleus, occurs in the cytoplasm of the ordinary epithelial cells in the digestive diverticula.


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