Structural Properties of the Female Accessory Gland in the Stable Fly, Stomoxys calcitrans

1995 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 362-373
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Cook ◽  
Nan W. Pryor

The accessory reproductive glands of the female stable fly are translucent structures that run parallel to the common oviduct when the ovipositor is extended. The only muscles found associated with the gland were those at either end of the long tube of simple cuboidal epithelial cells. The posterior region of each gland is connected to the anterior vagina by means of a valve of circular muscle. The myofibrils of the valve are separated into sarcomeres of irregular alignment with Z disks that appear as discontinuous rows of dense bodies. Transections through the Z disk region also revealed a perforated character which is common in muscles that have the ability to super contract. The sarcolemma of many cells have tubular invaginations that correspond to the T-system of tubules found in most muscles. Terminal axons with both synaptic vesicles and larger neurosecretory granules were found in close apposition to muscle fibers of the valve. Large vacuoles (with a mean of 26.36 μm and a SD = ± 2.09) were the most prominent structures in the cytoplasm of the glandular epithelium. The fine structure of these vacuoles showed a microvillar border and a central portion that contains clumps of secretory material in a granular matrix. Many vacuoles also contain dense inclusion bodies while other inclusion bodies were observed in apical membranous networks just beneath the cuticular intima. Such ultrastructural features suggest a largely merocrine type secretion for this gland.

1997 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 138-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Cook ◽  
Nan W. Pryor

The four Malpighian tubules of the female stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans L., were divided into an anterior dorsal and a posterior ventral pair. A marked structural divergence existed between the distal terminations of these two pairs. This divergence consisted primarily in the number and size of crystalline granules present in the respective distal regions. The terminal diameter of the dorsal tubules was at least twice that of the ventral tubules. Intrinsic muscles were found only in that short proximal section (ureter) of each pair of tubules that emptied into the midgut. Other regions of the tubules showed no evidence of a muscle sheath. The small intrinsic muscles (0.25 to 0.6 μm diam) of the ureter were visible under Nomarski optics at high magnification (600X). The muscle fibers were embedded in the basal regions of the large epithelial cells that line the lumen of the ureter. Occasionally, these muscles were arranged in a multilayered lattice. Myofibrils were separated into sarcomeres of irregular alignment with classical A (0.8 μm in length) and I bands. The Z disk consisted of discontinuous rows of dense bodies, and in partially contracted muscle some myofilaments of the A band passed between the dense bodies of the Z bands. T-system tubules and the sarcoplasmic reticulum were sparse to non-existent.


Author(s):  
T. L. Benning ◽  
P. Ingram ◽  
J. D. Shelburne

Two benzofuran derivatives, chlorpromazine and amiodarone, are known to produce inclusion bodies in human tissues. Prolonged high dose chlorpromazine therapy causes hyperpigmentation of the skin with electron-dense inclusion bodies present in dermal histiocytes and endothelial cells ultrastructurally. The nature of the deposits is not known although a drug-melanin complex has been hypothesized. Amiodarone may also cause cutaneous hyperpigmentation and lamellar lysosomal inclusion bodies have been demonstrated within the cells of multiple organ systems. These lamellar bodies are believed to be the product of an amiodarone-induced phospholipid storage disorder. We performed transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and energy dispersive x-ray microanalysis (EDXA) on tissue samples from patients treated with these drugs, attempting to detect the sulfur atom of chlorpromazine and the iodine atom of amiodarone within their respective inclusion bodies.A skin biopsy from a patient with hyperpigmentation due to prolonged chlorpromazine therapy was fixed in 4% glutaraldehyde and processed without osmium tetroxide or en bloc uranyl acetate for Epon embedding.


1928 ◽  
Vol s2-72 (287) ◽  
pp. 447-483
Author(s):  
C. J. GEORGE

1. In the male Philaenus and Agrion the vasa deferentia terminate on the ninth segment in the early stages. An ectodermal invagination from that segment joins them subsequently and thus the male gonopore is established. 2. The accessory glands develop in Philaenus male from the anterior end of the swollen extremities of the vasa deferentia and the vesiculae seminales from a still more forward region. 3. The accessory glands of the male are mesodermal in origin and not ectodermal as some authors state. 4. There is no evidence as to the existence of a ‘pair of ectodermal ejaculatory’ ducts either in Philaenus orin Agrion, and reasons are adduced to show that they do not exist at all in the higher Insecta. 5. In the female nymph of Philaenus the oviducts terminate on the seventh segment. They are subsequently joined by an ectodermal invagination from the seventh segment. The common oviduct is formed in two parts: the anterior part is derived from the posterior region of the invagination on the seventh and the posterior region is formed as a groove from the ectodermis of the eighth segment and subsequently this groove is converted into a tube. When the second part is completed it is in connexion with the invagination from the seventh and opens to the outside on the eighth segment. The ectodermal invagination from the seventh also gives rise to the spermatheca. A median accessory gland develops as an invagination from the ninth segment between the bases of the inner ovipositor lobes. A pair of accessory glands develop as paired imaginations from the anterior region of the ninth segment. 6. In the female nymph of Agrion the oviducts fuse to form a single duct and terminate in the middle of the eighth segment. Posteriorly an ectodermal invagination from the eighth segment meets this duct and lies in a position dorsal to it. Later on the ectodermal invagination develops a spermatheca dorsally and the mesodermal and the ectodermal ducts unite into one. The accessory glands develop as paired ectodermal invaginations from the anterior region of the ninth segment. 7. The female gonopore is not homologous in the different groups of insects. The vaginal opening in Orthoptera, Hymenoptera, Homoptera, Diptera, and Lepidoptera is homologous. The vaginal opening in Coleoptera is homologous with the oviducal opening of Lepidoptera, with the opening of the accessory gland of Homoptera, Hymenoptera, Diptera, Isoptera, and the opening of the spermatheca in some Orthoptera. 8. The common oviduct, being formed differently in the different groups is not homologous. The accessory organs, e. g. spermatheca, are not homologous in the different groups. 9. There is no evidence to show that the common oviduct is of paired origin. 10. The occurrence of a median accessory structure on the ninth segment which develops in the young as an invagination between the bases of the inner ovipositor lobes is very general in the higher Insecta. In some it functions as a gland, in others as a storehouse for spermatozoa. 11. The homology of the paired accessory glands is indicated. 12. The male genital ducts are not strictly homologous with those of the female. The homologue of the ejaculatory duct is the invagination from the ninth segment in the female. 13. The Odonata stand isolated in having a mesodermal region for the common oviduct and in the peculiar development of the two processes between the anterior ovipositor lobes. 14. The probable lines of evolution of the female efferent system in Insecta are indicated. The study of the development of the female efferent system indicates that the groups Orthoptera, Homoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera are very closely allied. Coleoptera seem to have had quite a different line of evolution from the above groups in this respect. 15. The adult Odonatan anatomy of the genital organs in the female as observed by me is in some respects different from that described by Tillyard. In conclusion I wish to express my deep sense of gratitude towards Professor Balfour-Browne and Dr. J. W. Munroe, both of whom have always been ready to help me. My colleague Mr. R. I. Nel, who is working on similar lines in this department,, has rendered me valuable help, not only in matters connected with the subject proper but also in translating difficult German references. I am also indebted to Mr. Peter Gray who helped me a good deal in translating references in Italian.


1977 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 136-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.A. Akster ◽  
W.A. Smit

In the Colorado Beetle, the terminal filament cells resemble the epidermal cells which connect muscle cells with the cuticle, the so-called tendon cells. They contain many microtubules which have projections interconnecting them. The microtubules are also connected by these projections to desmosomes. The tunica propria is a basement membrane-like layer of low elasticity. It separates the terminal filament from the germarium. The outer ovariole sheath is a muscle sheath which is continuous with the muscle sheath around the oviducts. The whole muscle sheath consists of a monolayer network. Sarcolemmal invaginations at the I band and at the Z line probably form part of one T system. The cuticle of the common oviduct has scales with long caudally directed spines. The rostral attachment of the muscle sheath corresponds to the existing descriptions of tendon cells. The attachment of the muscle sheath to the cuticle of the common oviduct is different.


1976 ◽  
Vol 39 (8) ◽  
pp. 546-550
Author(s):  
C. J. WASHAM ◽  
W. E. SANDINE ◽  
P. R. ELLIKER

Light and electron microscopy studies were made of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains which were sensitive and resistant to a quaternary ammonium compound (QAC). The colonies of the sensitive cells on Tryptone Glucose Yeast Extract Agar were granular and homogeneous in consistency. In contrast, the colonies of the resistant strain on the same medium were granular, non-homogenous, and contained numerous dense areas. Morphological observations revealed the resistant cells to be 30% smaller than sensitive cells and non-motile due to loss of polar flagella, a characteristic which was not restored when the organisms were cultured in the absence of QAC for more than 7 months. Electron-dense inclusion bodies were present in resistant cells; they ranged in size from about 0.05 to 0.2 μm in diameter. These bodies, which were not identified, were released intact from lysing cells; as many as 20 per cell were visible.


1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 222-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. S. Martin ◽  
G. Larbalestier

Epidermal chloroplasts of Taraxacum officinale agg. contain large electron-dense inclusion bodies enclosed by a single membrane. These inclusion bodies were not observed in mesophyll chloroplasts. The origin and functional role of these structures is discussed.


1962 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-474 ◽  
Author(s):  
John E. Dowling ◽  
I. R. Gibbons

In this report, particular attention is paid to the inclusion bodies found in the apical cytoplasm of the pigment epithelial cell. These bodies are of variable size and form. The smallest (0.4 µ diameter) consist of a granular matrix enclosed by a single membrane, and are similar to the lysosomes of hepatic cells. Larger inclusion bodies contain areas of lamellated material in addition to granular matrix. The largest particles seen (2 µ diameter) are almost entirely lamellar. These different forms seem closely related, for it is possible to find all transitional stages between the smallest and largest particles. The relationship between the lamellar inclusion bodies and the rod outer segments is discussed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 303 (5) ◽  
pp. C567-C576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanya R. Cully ◽  
Joshua N. Edwards ◽  
Oliver Friedrich ◽  
D. George Stephenson ◽  
Robyn M. Murphy ◽  
...  

The majority of the skeletal muscle plasma membrane is internalized as part of the tubular (t-) system, forming a standing junction with the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane throughout the muscle fiber. This arrangement facilitates not only a rapid and large release of Ca2+ from the SR for contraction upon excitation of the fiber, but has also direct implications for other interdependent cellular regulators of Ca2+. The t-system plasma membrane Ca-ATPase (PMCA) and store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) can also be activated upon release of SR Ca2+. In muscle, the SR Ca2+ sensor responsible for rapidly activated SOCE appears to be the stromal interacting molecule 1L (STIM1L) isoform of STIM1 protein, which directly interacts with the Orai1 Ca2+ channel in the t-system. The common isoform of STIM1 is STIM1S, and it has been shown that STIM1 together with Orai1 in a complex with the partner protein of STIM (POST) reduces the activity of the PMCA. We have previously shown that Orai1 and STIM1 are upregulated in dystrophic mdx mouse muscle, and here we show that STIM1L and PMCA are also upregulated in mdx muscle. Moreover, we show that the ratios of STIM1L to STIM1S in wild-type (WT) and mdx muscle are not different. We also show a greater store-dependent Ca2+ influx in mdx compared with WT muscle for similar levels of SR Ca2+ release while normal activation and deactivation properties were maintained. Interestingly, the fiber-averaged ability of WT and mdx muscle to extrude Ca2+ via PMCA was found to be the same despite differences in PMCA densities. This suggests that there is a close relationship among PMCA, STIM1L, STIM1S, Orai1, and also POST expression in mdx muscle to maintain the same Ca2+ extrusion properties as in the WT muscle.


1936 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 559-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathias Thomsen ◽  
Ole Hammer

When studying the biology of the house-fly or any other fly annoying to man and domestic animals with a view to practical control, it is obvious that a correct knowledge of the breeding-places of the species is perhaps the most important problem which the investigator has to solve. As to the common house-fly (Musca domestica, L.) it is generally held that this problem has been completely cleared up by several workers years ago, but recent observations in Denmark have convinced the writers that this is not the case. We have arrived at conclusions regarding the chief breeding-places of the house-fly differing from those generally found in text-books.Our work has not been limited to Musca domestica, for we have as far as possible studied the breeding-places of other flies occurring in houses or connected with domestic animals, first and foremost the stable-fly (Stomoxys calcitrans, L.). The knowledge of the biology of the stable-fly in Europe is surprisingly meagre, though the practical interest of this species as a tormentor of cattle and horses and a possible vector of infectious diseases is generally recognised.As our observations may be of some interest to workers in other countries we have collected them in this paper, which constitutes the third of a series containing the main results of our investigations into the fly problem started under the auspices of the Health Organisation of the League of Nations and the Danish Committee of Rural Hygiene and with the support of the Danish Ministry of Agriculture and several private funds.


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