首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 140 毫秒
1.
A scanning electron microscopy study showed the presence of large pores in the endocardium of the sinus venosus of the dogfish Scyliorhinus canicula. The pores were always found on large bundles which protruded into the cardiac lumen. The bundles were mainly constituted of granule-containing nerve fibres. The average diameter of the pores was 3.2 μm (range=1.5-5.0μm), and their density, was about 822 pores mm−2. Endocardial pores were absent in other areas of the sinus venosus, but they were observed on the little bundles of granulated nerve fibres which were scattered throughout the atrium. The existence of large endocardial pores associated with bundles of granulated nerve fibres supports the hypothesis for the neuroendocrine nature of the elasmobranch sinus venosus wall.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The wall of the sinus venosus in an elasmobranchian species, Chimaera monstrosa L. is described.Endocardial cells contain numerous large vacuoles, as well as a number of membrane-bounded, moderately electron dense bodies (MDB). Myocardial cells lie closely packed into bundles surrounded by a basal lamina of about 20 nm thickness, and by large amounts of collagen fibres. These cells are connected by desmosomes of 1–2 µm length and with an intermembranous gap of 10–20 nm. Myocardial cells poor in myofibrils are intermingled with cells containing a well developed contractile material. Atrial specific granules are scarce. Vesiculated nerve processes occur at a distance of about 20 nm from the myocardial sarcolemma. Myocardial cells of the sino-atrial junction appear ultrastructurally similar to those located elsewhere in the sinus venosus. Epicardial cells contain large vacuoles, and have fibrecoated protrusions extending into the pericardial space.The possibility of pacemaker activity in the elasmobranchian sinus venosus is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The myocardium of the sinus venosus of the dogfish ( Scyliorhinus canicula ) is located between a thick subepicardial collagen-rich layer and a subendocardial network of nerve fibres and ganglion cells. The sinoatrial valve consists of two transversal folds of the cardiac wall which are separated by connective tissue, except in their free margins.
The myocardium of the sinus venosus and the sinusal face of the sinoatrial valve is arranged in bundles which are surrounded by a 40 nm-thick basal lamina. The myocardial cells measure about 7-9 μm in diameter at the nuclear level. Nerve terminals are frequent in the centre of the bundles. Most of the sinusal myocardiocytes have a scarce amount of myofibrils which are randomly orientated. The sarcoplasmic reticulum is relatively well developed and consists of peripheral couplings, subsarcolemmal vesicles, circular and longitudinal tubules. The scarce intercalated discs show only fasciae adhaerentes . Gap junctions, desmosomes or specific granules are not observed in the sinusal myocardiocytes of the dogfish. In contrast, the atrial myocardiocytes are smaller, about 5-6 μm in diameter at the nuclear level. The cytoplasm is denser and the myofibrils are abundant and orientated in parallel directions. Specific granules are present. although scarce. Subsarcolemmal vesicles are less frequent, while the atrial intercalated discs are larger and more abundant than those of the sinus venosus. Neural elements are scarce in the atrium.
The differences observed between sinus venosus and atrium might be related to the morphological criteria to distinguish between the nodal tissue and the working myocardiocytes of higher vertebrates. On the other hand, we think that the connective tissue placed between sinus venom and atrium means that the contraction impulse generated in the sinus venosus must reach the atrium through the free margin of the valve. It might play a role in the sinoatrial valve function.  相似文献   

4.
Helle  K. B.  Miralto  A.  Pihl  K. E.  Tota  B. 《Cell and tissue research》1983,231(2):399-414
Summary The general and ultrastructural organization of the heart of the elasmobranch, Scyllium stellare, was studied in normal and in anoxic animals. The rich coronary supply was revealed three-dimensionally by the use of corrosion casts, showing a thebesian system of coronary arterioles and capillaries in the thin, outer compact layer as well as in the predominant, inner spongy layer of trabeculae.Only the sinus venosus received a neuronal input of large bundles of granule-containing axons terminating at fenestrated regions of the endocardium and suggesting a neurohormonal function.A simple, tubular sarcoplasmic reticulum with flattened junctional cisternae was present in myocardial cells of 1–5 m diameter, which contained one or two bundles of myofibrils. The latter were closely apposed to the inner aspect of the plasmalemma. Mitochondria were located centrally in the cells, which were joined by unfolded desmosomes involving Z-band material.Long periods of anoxia were tolerated without loss of heart function, but at the expense of cytoplasmic glycogen. Lipid granules were abundant in all layers and chambers, notably in animals prepared in the summer. The lipid granules displayed a marked increase in electron density when the heart was incubated in a buffered oxalate solution prior to fixation. A glycogen-sparing effect of the lipids during anoxia was observed.  相似文献   

5.
Summary A study has been made of catecholamine stores that may be involved in cardiac regulation in the shark Heterodontus portusjacksoni. The anatomy of the anterior chromaffin bodies associated with the sympathetic chain is described. A fluoresent histochemical study shows that the chromaffin cells contain a monoamine, probably noradrenaline. The chromaffin cells have a fine structure comparable to that of chromaffin cells in other vertebrates. The heart is devoid of histochemically-demonstrable chromaffin cells or adrenergic nerve fibres, with the exception of a very sparse adrenergic innervation of the sinus venosus. It is argued that adrenergic control of the heart in Heterodontus might occur via amines released from the anterior chromaffin masses into the blood in the posterior cardinal sinus, which is then aspirated directly into the heart.  相似文献   

6.
Ramos C 《Tissue & cell》2004,36(6):399-407
The sinus venosus of fish is the most caudal chamber of the heart. It is often reduced in teleosts but well developed in elasmobranchs. The sinus venosus of the dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicula) is vital, since it harbours key elements such as a little known neuroendocrine system and the nodal tissue. However, the study of its structure is still incomplete. We examined the endocardium, epicardium and subepicardium of the sinus venosus in mature dogfishes. The wall is 100-250 microm thick and comprises three main layers. Large bundles of myocardial cells occupy the middle layer. The endothelial ensheathing is composed of thin endocardial cells with prominent nuclei towards the lumen, whose cytoplasm contains numerous dense bodies and moderately dense bodies, 150-800 nm in diameter and large vacuoles. The possible functions of these organelles are discussed. The outermost layer is made of a robust sheet of cuboidal epicardial cells separated from the subepicardium by a conspicuous basal lamina. Numerous microvilli towards the pericardial cavity and elliptical vesicles are located in the apex of epicardial cells. A thick layer richly endowed with dense bundles of collagen fibres forms the subepicardial space. This structure should be contrasted with the venous return mechanism of elasmobranchs.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Neuronal pathways in the retrocerebral complex and thoracico-abdominal ganglionic mass of the blowflyCalliphora vomitoria have been identified immunocytochemically with antisera against the extended-enkephalins, Met-enkephalin-Arg6-Phe7 (Met-7) and Met-enkephalin-Arg6-Gly7-Leu8 (Met-8). Neurons of the hypocerebral ganglion, immunoreactive to Met-8, have axons in the crop duct nerve and terminals in muscles of the crop and its duct. Certain neurons of the hypocerebral ganglion are also immunoreactive to Met-7, and axons from these cells innervate the heart. Met-8 immunoreactive nerve terminals invest the cells of the corpus allatum. The source of this material is believed to ve a single pair of lateral neurosecretory cells in the brain. There is no Met-7 immunoreactive material in the corpus allatum. In the corpus cardiacum neither Met-7 nor Met-8 immunoreactivity is present in the cells. However, in the neuropil of the gland certain fibres, with their origins elsewhere, do contain Met-8 immunoreactivity. The most prominent neurons in the thoracic ganglion are the Met-7 immunoreactive ventral thoracic neurosecretory cells, axons from which project to neurohaemal areas in the dorsal neural sheath and also, via the ventral connective, to the brain. Co-localisation studies show that the perikarya of these cells are immunoreactive to antisera raised against several vertebrate-type peptides, such as Met-7, gastrin/cholecystokinin and pancreatic polypeptide. However, their axons and terminals show varying amounts of the peptides, suggesting differential transport and utilisation. Only a few cells in the thoracic ganglion are immunoreactive to Met-8 antisera. These lie close to the nerve bundles suppling the legs. In the abdominal ganglion, Met-8 immunoreactive neurons project to the muscles of the hindgut. This study suggests that the extended enkephalin-like peptides ofCalliphora may have a variety of different roles: as neurotransmitter or neuromodulator substances; in the direct innervation of effector organs; and as neurohormones.  相似文献   

8.
The concentrations of catecholamines in the heart chambers of elasmobranchs were measured by the fluorimetric method of Bertler et al. (1958). Noradrenaline (NA) can be detected in all the chambers, but the sinus venosus is by far the richest in NA. This can either be due to the presence of storage sites for this amine in the sinus wall, or to a transport of amine to the sinus venosus from the anterior chromaffin bodies. The sinus wall contains large numbers of "granule containing cells" and axon-like processes, both with numerous dense-core vesicles of about 1800 A diameter. The dense-core vesicles contain a uranophilic matrix indicating the presence of protein, phospholipids and/or nucleic acid. The reactions failed to demonstrate amine, which may be due to a loss of amine by diffusion, to a relatively low intravesicular amine concentration, or, to the absence of amines in these granule-containing cells and processes. Heavy accumulations of granule-containing processes occur in the subendothelial area. The endothelium contains fenestrae and pores through which granule-containing fibres protrude into the venous cavity. Granule-containing cells are innervated by presumed cholinergic nerve endings. It is suggested that the granule-containing cells and fibres belong to the neurosecretory system with a cholinergic input, releasing the contents of the dense-core vesicles into the blood stream at the level of the venous cavity.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Tissue from the four chambers of the heart of the plaice (Pleuronectes platessa, L.) has been examined in the electron microscope in order to describe the morphology of the heart at a fine structural level.The sinus venosus is a thin walled chamber between 60–90 thick consisting of a connective tissue matrix in which are situated the plexus of the parasympathetic cardiac ganglion and localised bundles of myocardial cells. The myocardial cells do not form a continuous layer but are associated in particular with the region of the cardiac ganglion and are innervated by it.The sino-auricular junction has hitherto been described as a pacemaker region but the myocardial cells in this region are identical in morphology to myocardial cells in other parts of the heart. There is a large complex of nerves, derived from the cardiac plexus, that runs around the junction before branching to innervate the auricle.The myocardial tissues consist of an outer layer of myocardium forming the wall of the heart and a profusion of trabeculae. The endocardium invaginates into the endocardium to divide up the cells into populations of approximately 25 cells in profile. There is no well-defined coronary blood supply although capillaries are occasionally seen. The myocardial cells themselves are small in diameter (3.5–5.5 ) and show some primitive features which are: a short sarcomere (1.4–2.0 ), the absence of any sarcoplasmic reticulum, and very scarce fasciae occludentes. In the atrium in particular, there are many groups of 1500 Å membrane-bound, dense-cored vesicles in the myocardial cells. Ventricular cells contain more myofilaments and mitochondria than do atrial cells and have many vesicles of 0.1–0.3 diameter whose function and contents are unknown.Connective tissue is very evident in the plaice heart, being an integral part of the sinus venosus and the auriculo-ventricular junction and being the sole constituent of the auriculoventricular valve and the bulbus arteriosus.This investigation was carried out during the tenure of an S. R. C. studentshyp awarded to R. M. S.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The paraventricular organ (PVO) and the posterior recess organ (PRO) of two elasmobranch species, the spiny dogfish,Squalus acanthias, and the skate,Raja radiata, were investigated by use of scanning and transmission electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry employing a series of primary antisera. The PVO and PRO contained four types of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-contacting neurons. One type was free of secretory granules and projected a dendrite-like process into the ventricle. The other three types were distinguished according to the size of their secretory granules. The ventricular extensions of these cells were filled with secretory granules. By means of immunocytochemistry three types of CSF-contacting neurons were observed in the PVO and PRO. Type I contained only serotonin; type 2 displayed only somatostatin; type 3 was endowed with both serotonin and somatostatin. Type I dominated in the PRO, whereas type 3 was the most frequent in the PVO. The latter cells appear to be the site of origin of a loose tract formed by serotonin- and somatostatinimmunoreactive fibers projecting from the PVO into the neuropil of the PRO. Compact bundles formed exclusively by serotonin fibers were also shown to extend between the PVO and PRO. The basal processes of the CSF-contacting neurons of the PRO penetrated into the underlying neuropil. This neuropil is rich in synapses and can be regarded as an integrative area to which the basal processes of the local CSF-contacting neurons, serotonin and somatostatin fibers from the PVO, and fibers containing immunoreactive thyrotropin-releasing hormone of unknown origin, support a conspicuous input. The present findings indicate that the PVO and PRO of elasmobranchs are functionally integrated structures.Dedicated to Professor Erik Dahl on the occasion of his 75th birthday.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The distribution of gastrin/CCK-like immunoreactive material has been studied in the retrocerebral complex of Calliphora. The material reacts with antisera specific for the common COOH terminus of gastrin and CCK but not with N-terminal antisera. The three thoracic ganglia and the fused abdominal ganglia each contain a specific number of symmetrically arranged immunoreactive cells both dorsally and ventrally in pairs on either side of the midline in a sagittal plane. The neuropil of these ganglia also contains a considerable amount of immunoreactive fibres and droplets. Reconstructed axonal pathways suggest that some of the nerve fibres have their origins within the brain and/or the suboesophageal ganglion. Immunoreactive material may also be seen apparently leaving the thoracic ganglion posteriorly via the abdominal nerves, and there is strong evidence of a neurohaemal organ within the dorsal sheath in the region of the metathoracic and abdominal ganglia. There appears to be a direct correlation between the content of peptidergic material of cells and fibres and the age and diet of the flies. The corpus cardiacum contains COOH-terminal specific gastrin/CCK-like material within the intrinsic cells and in the neuropil. It is present also in the cardiac-recurrent nerve entering the corpus cardiacum anteriorly and in the nerves leaving the gland dorsoposteriorly, the aortic or cardiac nerves. It is not observed, however, in the nerves leaving the corpus cardiacum ventroposteriorly, the so-called oesophageal, gastric or crop-duct nerves. The corpus allatum and the hypocerebral ganglion do not contain immunoreactive material of this type. Gastrin/CCK-like and secretin-like immunoreactive materials appear to co-exist in the cells of the corpus cardiacum and co-existence of gastrin/CCK-like and pancreatic polypeptide like substances occurs within certain cells of the thoracic ganglion.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Indirect immunofluorescence studies using antisera to synthetic somatostatin, human calcitonin and substance P indicate, in the neural complex of the sea-squirt, Ciona intestinalis L., that these polypeptides are present in large perikarya situated at the periphery of the cerebral ganglion as well as in some smaller perikarya in the medulla. In the medullary and transitional zone, there are nerve fibres that cross-react positively with anti-calcitonin and antisubstance P.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the heart in three species of hagfish: Myxine glutinosa, Eptatretus stoutii, and Eptatretus cirrhatus and report about the morphology of the ventricle, the arterial connection and the ventral aorta. On the whole, the hagfish heart lacks outflow tract components, the ventricle and atrium adopt a dorso‐caudal rather than a ventro‐dorsal relationship, and the sinus venosus opens into the left side of the atrium. This may indicate a “defective” cardiac looping during embryogenesis. The ventral aorta is elongated in M. glutinosa and E. stoutii but sac‐like in E. cirrhatus. The ventricles are entirely trabeculated. The myocytes show a low myofibrillar content and junctional complexes formed by fascia adherens and desmosomes. Gap junctions could not be demonstrated. Myocardial cells in M. glutinosa contain numerous lipid droplets. These droplets are less numerous in E. stoutii and practically absent in E. cirrhatus, suggesting different metabolic requirements. Other cell types present in the ventricle are chromaffin cells and granular leukocytes that contain rod‐shaped granules. The ventricle‐aorta connection is guarded by a bicuspid valve with left and right, pocket‐like leaflets. The leaflets extend from the cranial end of the ventricle into the aorta but the junction is asymmetrical. This junction contains a ganglion‐like structure in E. cirrhatus. The ventral aorta shows endothelial, media, and adventitial layers. The media contains smooth muscle cells surrounded by dense bands formed by tightly‐packed extracellular filaments. In addition, a short number of elastic fibers are observed in M. glutinosa and E. stoutii. Cellular and extracellular elements are more loosely organized in the aorta of E. cirrhatus. The collagenous adventitia contains ganglion‐like cells in the three species. In the absence of nerves, chromaffin and ganglion‐like cells may control the activity of the myocardium and that of the aortic smooth muscle cells, respectively. J. Morphol. 277:326–340, 2016. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
An immunogold-labelling electron-microscopic study of the frontal ganglion of two noctuids, Lacanobia oleracea and Helicoverpa armigera, has been carried out with antisera directed against three neuropeptides; allatostatins of the Y/FXFGL-NH2 type, Manduca sexta allatostatin (Mas-AS) and M. sexta allatotropin. The ganglion of both noctuids has two pairs of large peptidergic neurones with many clusters of electron-dense granules, one pair being situated anteriorly and the other posteriorly. By means of a double-labelling (flip-flop) technique, with different sizes of gold particles, all possible paired combinations of the three different types of peptide have been visualised within granules of the anterior neurones, leading to the conclusion that the three peptides are co-packaged and co-stored in these cells. Within the posterior neurones of L. oleracea, gold labelling of granules is only linked to the Y/FXFGL-NH2 allatostatin antisera and, in contrast to the anterior cells of this species in which double gold labelling results in a sparse accumulation of gold particles for any one peptide type, single labelling gives a more intense, uniform pattern of gold particles. In contrast to L. oleracea, the gold-labelling pattern seen in the posterior neurones of H. armigera reflects the co-localisation of allatostatins of the Y/FXFGL-NH2 type with Mas-AS in this species. Allatotropin is absent in the posterior neurones of both species.Grant funding was from the Wellcome Trust: grant no. 068105 (A.T.)  相似文献   

15.
SchistoFLRFamide (PDVDHVFLRF-NH2) is one of the major endogenous neuropeptides of the FMRF-amide family found in the nervous system of the locust,Schistocerca gregaria. To gain insights into the potential physiological roles of this neuropeptide we have examined the distribution of SchistoFLRFamide-like immunoreactivity in the ventral nervous system of adult locusts by use of a newly developed N-terminally specific antibody. SchistoFLRFamide-like immunoreactivity in the ventral nerve cord is found in a subgroup of the neurones that are immunoreactive to an antiserum raised against bovine pancreatic polypeptide (BPP). In the suboesophageal ganglion three groups of cells stain, including one pair of large posterior ventral cells. These cells are the same size, in the same location in the ganglion and have the same branching pattern as a pair of BPP immunoreactive cells known to innervate the heart and retrocerebral glandular complex of the locust. In the thoracic and abdominal ganglia two and three sets of cells, respectively, stain with both the SchistoFLRFamide and BPP antisera. In the abdominal ganglia the immunoreactive cells project via the median nerves to the intensely immunoreactive neurohaemal organs.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The serotoninergic innervation of the corpus cardiacum (CC) of Locusta migratoria was investigated using two antisera against serotonin. A dense network of immunoreactive nerve fibres was present in the storage lobe of the CC. Immunopositive fibres only sporadically crossed the border between the storage lobe and the glandular lobe of the CC. Immunopositive fibres entered the storage lobe of the CC via the nervus corporis cardiaci I (NCCI); NCCII was immunonegative. Unilateral retrograde fillings of the NCCI with the fluorescent tracer Lucifer yellow, followed by antiserotonin immunocytochemistry, revealed about 20 double-labelled neurones in the anterior part of the pars intercerebralis. The double-labelled neurones were scattered between fluorescent non-immunoreactive neurones. Additionally, 5–7 neurones labelled only with Lucifer yellow were found at the ventrolateral side of the tritocerebrum. No immunopositive neurones were observed in the hypocerebral ganglion. Immunopositive fibres from neurones in the frontal ganglion ran via the recurrent nerve and the neuropile of the hypocerebral ganglion into the paired oesophageal nerve. At most, a few immunopositive nerve fibres occurred in the cardiostomatogastric nerves II, which connect the storage lobe of the CC with the paired oesophageal nerve at the caudal end of the hypocerebral ganglion.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Fine structural observations were made on the vesicle and granule content of ganglion cells in the posterior subclavian ganglion and peripheral nerve fibers of the upper forelimb of the newt Triturus. The populations of vesicles and granules in normal ganglion cells and nerve fibers were compared with those observed after limb transection. In normal neurons, clear vesicles range in size from 250 to 1000 Å in diameter, but are most frequently 400–500 Å. Vesicles with dense contents (granules) also vary greatly in size, but most are 450–550 Å in diameter and correspond to dense-core vesicles. Large granules that contain acid phosphatase activity are thought to be lysosomes. During limb regeneration, in both the ganglion cells and peripheral nerves, the ratio of dense vesicles to clear vesicles increases. There is a large increase in number of dense granules with a diameter over 800 Å, particularly in the peripheral regenerating fibers. This study shows that regenerating neurons differ from normal in their content of vesicular structures, especially large, membrane-bounded granules.This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (GB 7912) and from the National Cancer Institute (TICA-5055), National Institutes of Health, United States Public Health Service.  相似文献   

18.
We re-investigated the occurrence of substance P-like immunoreactivity in the retina of the goldfish Carassius auratus using antisera to substance P and other tachykinins. Most antisera labelled a previously described single class of mono-stratified amacrine cells arborizing in layer 3 of the inner plexiform layer. Preabsorption experiments showed that these amacrine cells contained at least one tachykinin-like peptide. One antiserum (INC 353) to substance P labelled not only these amacrine cells but also fibres in layer 1 of the inner plexiform layer and fibres in the optic nerve. These fibres were identified as retinopetal projections of the nervus terminalis, in part because of colocalized labelling with antisera against gonadotropin-releasing hormone and FMRFamide. Preabsorption experiments showed that the substance P-immunoreactive material in the nervus terminalis was not substance P or any other typical tachykinin. Labelling of the nervus terminalis with INC 353 was blocked by preabsorption with two bovine FMRFamide-like peptides, F8Famide and A18Famide, which contain a substance P(4–7)-like region. Antisera to F8Famide and A18Famide strongly labelled ganglia of the nervus terminalis and retinopetal fibres. We suggest that labelling of the nervus terminalis by antisera to substance P and FMRFamide occurs because of homologies between these antigens and a non-tachykinin, endogenous peptide that is similar to F8Famide and A18Famide.  相似文献   

19.
The formation of elastic fibres was observed in the cultured cells derived from the tunica media and the tunica adventitia of mouse aorta. Bundles of myofilaments with dense bodies were abundantly observed in the cytoplasm of the cultured medial cells, and numerous bundles of microfibrillar components were present in the intercellular spaces. Fine granules of approximately 50 nm in diameter were observed in the bundles of microfibrillar components. It was supposed that these fine granules of elastin fused with each other and formed elastic aggregates and then formed large elastic clumps. Numerous bundles of microfibrillar components were also present in the intercellular spaces of the cultured adventitial cells. Elastic aggregates were scarcely observed in the bundles of microfibrillar components. However, large elastic clumps as observed in the medial cell culture could not be found in the adventitial cell culture. It is suggested that the formation of large elastic clumps might be related to the sheet structures or lamellae of elastic fibres in the tunica media.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Two groups of cerebral dorsal cells of the pulmonate snail Planorbarius corneus stain positively with antisera raised against synthetic fragments of the B- and C-chain of the molluscan pro-insulin-related prohormone, proMIP-I, of another pulmonate snail, Lymnaea stagnalis. At the light-microscopic level the somata of the dorsal cells and their axons and neurohemal axon terminals in the periphery of the paired median lip nerves are immunoreactive with both antisera. Furthermore, the canopy cells in the lateral lobes of the cerebral ganglia are positive. In addition, MIPB-immunoreactive neurons are found in most other ganglia of the central nervous system. At the ultrastructural level, pale and dark secretory granules are found in somata and axon terminals of the dorsal cells. Dark granules are about 4 times as immunoreactive to both antisera as pale granules. Release of anti-MIPB- and anti-MIPC-immunopositive contents of the secretory granules by exocytosis is apparent in material treated according to the tannic acid method. It is concluded that the dorsal and canopy cells synthesize a molluscan insulin-related peptide that is packed in the cell body into secretory granules and that is subsequently transported to the neurohemal axon terminals and released into the hemolymph by exocytosis. Thus, MIP seems to act as a neurohormone on peripheral targets. On the basis of the analogy between the dorsal cells and the MIP-producing cells in L. stagnalis, it is proposed that the dorsal cells of P. corneus are involved in the control of body growth and associated processes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号