Ultrastructural studies on the secretory activity of the oviduct epithelium of the platypus

Reproduction ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 491-492
Author(s):  
R. Hughes ◽  
C. Shorey
Parasitology ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diane J. McLaren

The ultrastructural morphology of selected microfilariae from four genera is described and compared. 1. The sheath is composed of a thick layer of material not limited by membranes. 2. The cuticle is composed of a trilaminate membrane, a dense cortical layer and an inner fibrous layer. The outer leaflet of the trilaminate membrane is covered with a dense surface layer. 3. The hypodermis is formed of four components, and the outer membrane of each component is castellated. 4. Muscle cells are located in the four quadrants of the worm; each cell is divided into a contractile and a non-contractile region. Anterior muscle cells are probably involved in the movement of the hook. 5. A buccal capsule is situated at the anterior tip of the microfilaria; it is connected to the pharyngeal thead. The thread is already surrounded by the future oesophageal cells. It is not yet known whether these structures are functional in the microfilaria. 6. Three kinds of sensory organelle have been identified; they all contain modified cilia. The hook is associated with one of the amphids. 7. The excretory vesicle opens through a pore in the cuticle and is surrounded at its base by an elongate cell. The apparatus may possibly have an excretory, secretory or osmoregulatory function. 8. The inner body is composed of dense, granular material; it is already surrounded by the future intestinal cells. The inner body is thought to represent some kind of reserve material. 9. Apart from its size the G1 cell shows no unusual characteristics. 10. The anal vesicle opens through a pore in the cuticle and is surrounded at its base by the three R cells. The anal apparatus may be instrumental in the removal of waste materials, or it may be involved in some secretory activity.


Parasitology ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. M. McLeay ◽  
N. Anderson ◽  
J. B. Bingley ◽  
D. A. Titchen

Sheep in which abomasal fundic pouches had been made were infected with Ostertagia circumcincta (150000 larvae in one sheep, 100000 in three sheep). Subsequently studies were made on pouch secretion, food intake, plasma pepsinogens and abomasal pouch secretory responses when the sheep first ate. A functional abomasal lesion was apparent within 4 days of infection judged by the changes in plasma pepsinogen levels and the sodium concentrations of abomasal contents. Whereas the secretory activity of the abomasal fundic pouches (never exposed to parasites) was maintained or increased, the pH and sodium concentration of contents taken from the infected part of the abomasum were indicative of either a failure to secrete or of a permeability reabsorptive lesion. Ultrastructural studies demonstrated that parietal cells of the pouches had the appearance of cells subjected to strong secretory stimuli, but those of infected abomasa were similar to cells of gastric mucosa subjected to agents suppressing secretion. Factors which might operate, on the one hand, to stimulate secretion from separated fundic abomasal pouches, and on the other to inhibit or modify the secretory activity of the fundic mucosa of the infected abomasa, are discussed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 100 (6) ◽  
pp. 1863-1874 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Thuret-Carnahan ◽  
J L Bossu ◽  
A Feltz ◽  
K Langley ◽  
D Aunis

The effect of 0.5-1.0 microM taxol, a potent promoter of microtubule polymerization in vitro, was studied on the secretory activity of chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla. Taxol was found to have a dual effect: the long-term effect (after a 1-h incubation) of taxol was to induce almost complete inhibition of catecholamine release, whereas after a short incubation (10 min) a massive, nicotine-independent release of catecholamine was produced. From results obtained using the patch-clamp technique to study the Ca++-dependent K+ channels (Ic channels), it was possible to conclude that taxol probably provokes an augmentation of free [Ca++]i in the cytoplasm, values increasing from 10(-8) M at rest to several 10(-7) M. The increased spontaneous release of stored neurohormones and the increased frequency of opening of Ic channels occur simultaneously and could both originate from a rise of [Ca++]i upon taxol addition. Immunofluorescence and ultrastructural studies showed that 13-h taxol treatment of chromaffin cells led to a different distribution of secretory organelles, and also to microtubule reorganization. In treated cells, microtubules were found to form bundles beneath the cell membrane and, at the ultrastructural level, to be packed along the cell axis. It is concluded that in addition to its action on microtubules, the antitumor drug taxol has side effects on the cell secretory activity, one of them being to modify free [Ca++]i.


1989 ◽  
Vol 122 (2) ◽  
pp. 439-NP ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Alkhalaf ◽  
G. Chaminadas ◽  
A. Y. Propper ◽  
G. L. Adessi

ABSTRACT The effects of oestradiol-17β, progesterone and oestrone-3-sulphate were studied in primary cultures of guinea-pig endometrial glandular epithelial cells. Comparative ultrastructural studies were performed by means of transmission electron microscopy on cells grown either without hormones or with oestradiol-17β (2 nmol/l), oestradiol-17β (2 nmol/l) plus progesterone (50 nmol/l), or oestrone sulphate (0·1 μmol/l). In the control medium, without steroid hormones, the majority of epithelial cells were poorly differentiated, although numerous small mitochondria were present and abundant lipid droplets could be observed. Oestradiol-17β stimulated metabolic activity in the cells. Progesterone added to oestradiol-17β-primed cells stimulated the development of the endoplasmic reticulum–Golgi system. Oestrone sulphate induced a higher level of differentiation characterized by large clear mitochondria, well-developed Golgi complexes, and active nuclei, suggesting secretory activity. In all cases, the cultured cells displayed deep invaginations of the nuclear membrane associated with nuclear pores, known as nucleolar channels. After treatment with oestrone sulphate these channels were associated with a characteristic reticular nucleolus. We conclude that cultured endometrial epithelial cells display secretory activity in response to treatment with oestradiol-17β plus progesterone, or with oestrone sulphate. Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 122, 439–444


Author(s):  
Richard S. Demaree ◽  
Donald M. Wootton

Cercariae (juvenile trematodes with tails) emerge from mollusk intermediate hosts and swim toward definitive hosts or encystment objects. The locomotor power is furnished by the tail. Upon reaching a suitable host or encystment object, the tail is cast off and the cercariae penetrate and/or encyst. Ultrastructural studies of cercariae are sparse. There is even lessUltrastructural studies of cercariae are sparse. There is even less information about the tail structure; and body-to-tail morphology has been documented only for Acanthatrium oregonense and Schistosoma japonicum.


Author(s):  
J. E. Lai-Fook

Dermal glands are epidermal derivatives which are reported to secrete either the cement layer, which is the outermost layer of the epicuticle or some component of the moulting fluid which digests the endocuticle. The secretions do not show well-defined staining reactions and therefore they have not been positively identified. This has contributed to another difficulty, namely, that of determining the time of secretory activity. This description of the fine structure of the developing glands in Rhodnius was undertaken to determine the time of activity, with a view to investigating their function.


Author(s):  
A. Gonzalez Angulo ◽  
R. Berlioz ◽  
R. Aznar

Recent ultrastructural studies on endometrial tissues from women wearing copper, wire intrauterine devices have disclosed morphological evidence of impaired glycogen degradation and secretion resulting in interference with the viability of blastocysts. Reduced microapocrine secretion observed with the scanning electron microscope supports this (1). In addition, organelle modifications have been observed in the epithelial cells of these women. The changes are seen in biopsies taken in the proliferative phase of the cycle and consist of mitochondrial vacuolation and myelin figure formation. These modifications disappear in the secretory phase and therefore have been regarded as reversible (2).The aim of the present studies was to investigate surface epithelial changes as well as organelle modifications in relation to the site of contact with an IUD that releases greater amounts of copper. Endometrial tissue was obtained from the uterine cavity of four young women wearing TCu-380-A intrauterine contraceptive devices for 4-6 weeks.


Author(s):  
T. M. Murad ◽  
H. A. I. Newman ◽  
K. F. Kern

The origin of lipid containing cells in atheromatous lesion has been disputed. Geer in his study on atheromatous lesions of rabbit aorta, suggested that the early lesion is composed mainly of lipid-laden macrophages and the later lesion has a mixed population of macrophages and smooth muscle cells. Parker on the other hand, was able to show evidence that the rabbit lesion is primarily composed of lipid-laden cells of smooth muscle origin. The above studies and many others were done on an intact lesion without any attempt of cellular isolation previous to their ultrastructural studies. Cell isolation procedures have been established for atherosclerotic lesions through collagenase and elastase digestion Therefore this procedure can be utilized to identify the cells involved in rabbit atheroma.


Author(s):  
K.S. McCarty ◽  
N.R. Wallace ◽  
W. Litaker ◽  
S. Wells ◽  
G. Eisenbarth

The production of adrenocorticotropic hormone by non-pituitary carcinomas has been documented in several tumors, most frequently small cell carcinoma of the lung, islet cell carcinomas of the pancreas, thymomas and carcinoids. Electron microscopy of these tumors reveals typical membrane-limited "neurosecretory" granules. Confirmation of the granules as adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) requires the use of OsO4 as a primary fixative to give the characteristic cored granule appearance in conjunction with immunohistochemical demonstration of the hormone peptide. Because of the rarity of ectopic ACTH production by mammary carcinomas and the absence of appropriate ultrastructural studies in the two examples of such ectopic hormone production in the literature of which we are aware (1,2), we present biochemical and ultrastructural data from a carcinoma of the breast with apparent ACTH production.The patient had her primary tumor in the right breast in 1969. The tumor recurred as visceral and subcutaneous metastases in 1976 and again in 1977.


Author(s):  
William J. Dougherty

The regulation of secretion in exocrine and endocrine cells has long been of interest. Electron microscopic and other studies have demonstrated that secretory proteins synthesized on ribosomes are transported by the rough ER to the Golgi complex where they are concentrated into secretory granules. During active secretion, secretory granules fuse with the cell membrane, liberating and discharging their contents into the perivascular spaces. When secretory activity is suppressed in anterior pituitary cells, undischarged secretory granules may be degraded by lysosomes. In the parathyroid gland, evidence indicates that the level of blood Ca ions regulates both the production and release of parathormone. Thus, when serum Ca is low, synthesis and release of parathormone are both stimulated; when serum Ca is elevated, these processes are inhibited.


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