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 31 毫秒
1.
Based on morphological evidence, Bryozoa together with Phoronida and Brachiopoda are traditionally combined in the group Lophophorata, although this view has been recently challenged by molecular studies. The core of the concept lies in the presence of the lophophore as well as the nature and arrangement of the body cavities. Bryozoa are the least known in this respect. Here, we focused on the fine structure of the body cavity in 12 bryozoan species: 6 gymnolaemates, 3 stenolaemates and 3 phylactolaemates. In gymnolaemates, the complete epithelial lining of the body cavity is restricted to the lophophore, gut walls, and tentacle sheath. By contrast, the cystid walls are composed only of the ectocyst-producing epidermis without a coelothelium, or an underlying extracellular matrix; only the storage cells and cells of the funicular system contact the epidermis. The nature of the main body cavity in gymnolaemates is unique and may be considered as a secondarily modified coelom. In cyclostomes, both the lophophoral and endosaccal cavities are completely lined with coelothelium, while the exosaccal cavity only has the epidermis along the cystid wall. In gymnolaemates, the lophophore and trunk cavities are divided by an incomplete septum and communicate through two pores. In cyclostomes, the septum has a similar location, but no openings. In Phylactolaemata, the body cavity is undivided: the lophophore and trunk coeloms merge at the bases of the lophophore arms, the epistome cavity joins the trunk, and the forked canal opens into the arm coelom. The coelomic lining of the body is complete except for the epistome, lophophoral arms, and the basal portions of the tentacles, where the cells do not interlock perfectly (this design probably facilitates the ammonia excretion). The observed partitioning of the body cavity in bryozoans differs from that in phoronids and brachiopods, and contradicts the Lophophorata concept.  相似文献   

2.
Results provided by modern TEM methods indicate the existence of the lophophoral and trunk coelomes but not of the preoral coelom in Phoronida. In the present work, the epistome in Phoronopsis harmeri was studied by histological and ultrastructural methods. Two kinds of cells were found in the frontal epidermis: supporting and glandular. The coelomic compartment is shown to be inside the epistome. This compartment has a complex shape, consists of a central part and two lateral branches, and contacts the lophophoral coelom, forming two complete dissepiments on the lateral sides and a partition with many holes in the center. TEM reveals that some portions of the incomplete partition are organized like a mesentery, with the two layers of cells separated by ECM. The myoepithelial cells of the coelomic lining form the circular and radial musculature of the epistome. Numerous amoebocytes occur in the coelom lumen. The tip of the epistome and its dorso-lateral parts lack a coelomic cavity and are occupied by ECM and muscle cells. The fine structure of the T-shaped vessel is described, and its localization inside lophophoral coelom is demonstrated. We assert that the cavity inside the epistome is the preoral coelom corresponding to the true preoral coelom of the larva of this species. Proving this assertion will require additional study of metamorphosis in this species. To clarify the patterns of coelom organization in phoronids, we discuss the bipartite coelomic system in Phoronis and the tripartite coelomic system in Phoronopsis.  相似文献   

3.
We studied the morphology and gross anatomy of the phoronid Phoronopsis harmeriusing light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. The body of Ph. harmeriis subdivided into several regions: a lophophore, a head, anterior, and posterior parts of the body, and an ampulla. The lophophore is spiral and comprises 0.5 turns. In males, there are lophophoral organs in the tentacular crown; under the lophophore, there is an epithelial fold or collar. The internal organization shows partitioning into three coeloms: the coelom of the epistome, the tentacular coelom, and the trunk coelom. The trunk coelom is divided into a series of chambers by a complex system of mesenteries. The intestine is U-shaped, and the epistome is located above the mouth opening. The circulatory system is closed and consists of the following vessels: the efferent and afferent circular, left and right lateral (efferent), and medial (afferent) vessels. In Ph. harmeri, there is a dorsolateral (afferent) vessel running through the ampulla and the lower part of the posterior trunk region. The excretory system is composed of paired metanephridia that resemble asymmetrical U-shaped tubes. Sexual dimorphism is characteristic of the structure of the distal part of the nephridium, which opens into the body cavity. The nervous system consists of a dorsal nervous field, a circular nerve plexus, and a giant left nerve fiber. Ph. harmeriis a dioecious species; the gametes develop in a vasoperitoneal tissue that envelops the intestine in the posterior part of the trunk region.  相似文献   

4.
The phylogenetic position of bryozoans has been disputed for decades, and molecular phylogenetic analyzes have not unequivocally clarified their position within the Bilateria. As probably the most basal bryozoans, Phylactolaemata is the most promising taxon for large‐scale phylogenetic comparisons. These comparisons require extending the morphological and developmental data by investigating different phylactolaemate species to identify basal characters and resolve in‐group phylogeny. Accordingly, we analyzed the bud development and the organogenesis of the freshwater bryozoan Cristatella mucedo, with special focus on the formation of the digestive tract and differentiation of the coelomic compartments. Most parts of the digestive tract are formed as an outpocketing at the future anal side growing towards the mouth area. The ganglion is formed by an invagination between the anlagen of the mouth and anus. The lophophoral arms develop as paired lateral protrusions into the lumen of the bud and are temporarily connected by a median, thin bridge. All coelomic compartments are confluent during their development and also in the adult. The epistome coelom develops by fusion of two peritoneal infolds between the gut loop and overgrows the ganglion medially. The coelomic ring canal on the oral side develops by two lateral ingrowths and supplies the oral tentacles. On the forked canal, supplying the innermost row of tentacles above the epistome, a bladder‐shaped swelling, probably with excretory function, is present in some adults. It remains difficult to draw comparisons to other phyla because only few studies have dealt with budding of potentially related taxa in more detail. Nonetheless, our results show that comparative organogenesis can contribute to phylactolaemate systematics and, when more data are available, possibly to that of other bryozoan classes and bilaterian phyla. J. Morphol., 2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
《Journal of morphology》2017,278(7):997-1011
The organization of the coelomic system and the ultrastructure of the coelomic lining are used in phylogenetic analysis to establish the relationships between major taxa. Investigation of the anatomy and ultrastructure of the coelomic system in brachiopods, which are poorly studied, can provide answers to fundamental questions about the evolution of the coelom in coelomic bilaterians. In the current study, the organization of the coelom of the lophophore in the brachiopod Lingula anatina was investigated using semithin sectioning, 3D reconstruction, and transmission electron microscopy. The lophophore of L. anatina contains two main compartments: the preoral coelom and the lophophoral coelom. The lining of the preoral coelom consists of ciliated cells. The lophophoral coelom is subdivided into paired coelomic sacs: the large and small sinuses (= canals). The lining of the lophophoral coelom varies in structure and includes monociliate myoepithelium, alternating epithelial and myoepithelial cells, specialized peritoneum and muscle cells, and podocyte‐like cells. Connections between cells of the coelomic lining are provided by adherens junctions, tight‐like junctions, septate junctions, adhesive junctions, and direct cytoplasmic bridges. The structure of the coelomic lining varies greatly in both of the main stems of the Bilateria, that is, in the Protostomia and Deuterostomia. Because of this great variety, the structure of the coelomic lining cannot by itself be used in phylogenetic analysis. At the same time, the ciliated myoepithelium can be considered as the ancestral type of coelomic lining. The many different kinds of junctions between cells of the coelomic lining may help coordinate the functioning of epithelial cells and muscle cells.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract. The hypothesis of a common ancestry of the lophophorate taxa Brachiopoda, Bryozoa, Phoronida, and the Deuterostomia can be traced back to the late 19th century when Masterman recognized a tripartite organization of the body consisting of pro-, meso-, and metasome, along with coelomic body cavities in each compartment, as characteristic for Echinodermata, Pterobranchia, Phoronida, and Brachiopoda. This idea became quite popular under the name "archicoelomate" concept. The organization of the phoronids, and especially of their transparent actinotroch larva, has for a long time been used as a touchstone for the validity of this concept. As a coelomic lining can reliably be recognized only on the ultrastructural level, this technique has been applied for adults of Phoronis ovalis , which is assumed to be a sister species to all other phoronids. Phoronis ovalis contains only two coelomic compartments, a posterior coelom inside the trunk (metasoma), occupying the space between the trunk epidermis and the digestive epithelium, and an anterior lophophoral coelom inside and basal to the tentacular crown (mesosoma). There is no coelomic cavity inside the epistome (prosoma). This part of the body is filled with myoepithelial cells, which are continuous with the epithelial lining of the lophophore cavity. These cells form a lumenless bilayer and possess long, tiny myofilamentous processes, which are completely embedded in an extracellular matrix. A comparison with data on P. muelleri shows that there is no need to assume three different coelomic cavities in Phoronida, in contrast to the predictions of the archicoelomate concept. At least for this taxon, a correspondence to the situation in deuterostomes can hardly be found.  相似文献   

7.
Among other characteristics a trimeric coelomic compartmentation consisting of an anterior protocoel, followed by a mesocoel and a posterior metacoel is traditionally believed to substantiate the sister-group relationship between Lophophorata and Deuterostomia, together forming the Radialia. As molecular data cannot support this hypothesis a reanalysis of the coelomic cavities in Phoronida is undertaken, because corresponding coelomic compartmentation is widely accepted to support the Radialia hypothesis. A coelomic cavity can be recognized on the ultrastructural level because its lining is a true epithelium with polarized cells interconnected by apical adherens junctions. This study reveals that neither in larval nor adult Phoronis muelleri (Phoronida) an anterior cavity with such a lining is present. What on the light microscopic level leads to the impression of a cavity inside the larval episphere, actually is an enlarged subepidermal extracellular matrix with an amorphous, presumably gel-like filling, into which several muscle cells are embedded. Larvae, thus, possess only one coelomic cavity, the large trunk coelom of the larva which is adopted in the adult organization. The second coelomic cavity of adult P. muelleri, the lophophore coelom, develops as a double-layer of epithelialized mesodermal cells at the base of the adult tentacle buds and becomes fluid filled during metamorphosis. Like the larval episphere, larval tentacles and most parts of the blastocoel are filled by an amorphous matrix. Reanalysis of the literature and comparison with Brachiopoda and Bryozoa allows the hypothesis that a protocoel is lacking in all Lophophorata, and that merely two unpaired coelomic cavities, one tentacle and one trunk coelom, can be assumed for the ground pattern of this taxon. These results do not provide further evidence for the Radialia hypothesis, but also do not contradict it. Accepted: 28 August 2000  相似文献   

8.
The tentacles of the pterobranch Cephalodiscus, a hemisessile ciliary feeder, originate from the lateral aspects of the arms and are covered by an innervated epithelium, the majority of its cells bearing microvilli. Each side of a tentacle has two rows of ciliated cells and additional glandular cells. The coelomic spaces in the tentacles are lined by cross-striated myoepithelial cells, allowing rapid movements of the tentacles. One, possibly two, blood vessels accompany the coelomic canal. On their outer sides the arms are covered by a simple ciliated epithelium with intra-epithelial nerve fibres; the inner side is covered by vacuolar cells. On both sides different types of exocrine cells occur. The collar canals of the mesocoel are of complicated structure. Ventrally their epithelium is pseudostratified and ciliated; dorsally it is lower and forms a fold with specialized cross-striated myoepithelial cells of the coelomic lining. Arms, tentacles, associated coelomic spaces and the collar canal of the mesocoel are considered to be functionally interrelated. It is assumed that rapid regulation of the pore width is possible and even necessary when the tentacular apparatus is retracted, which presumably leads to an increase of hydrostatic pressure in the coelom.  相似文献   

9.
The freely spawned eggs of Crania go through radial cleavage, embolic gastrulation, and the posteroventral part of the archenteron forms mesoderm through modified enterocoely. The blastopore closes in the posterior end of the larva. The ciliated, lecithotrophic larva has four pairs of coelomic pouches and three pairs of dorsal setal bundles. At metamorphosis, the larva curls ventrally by contraction of a pair of midventral muscles, which are extensions of the first pair of coelomic sacs; the larva attaches by the epithelium just behind the closed blastopore. The brachial valve is secreted by the middle part of the dorsal epithelium and the pedicle valve is secreted by the attachment epithelium. The second pair of coelomic sacs develop small attachment areas at the edge of the dorsal valve and become the lophophore coelom (mesocoel); the third pair of coelomic sacs become the body coelom (metacoel) with the adductor muscles. The posterior position of the closing blastopore is characteristic of deuterostomes. The ventral curving of the settling larva and the formation of both valves from dorsal epithelial areas indicate that the brachiopods have a very short ventral side as opposed to the phoronids. It is concluded that both groups have originated from a creeping ancestor with a straight gut.  相似文献   

10.
Free-floating coelomocytes in the tentacular coelomic cavity of the sipunculan Thysanocardia nigra Ikeda, 1904, were studied using light interference contrast microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The following coelomocyte types were distinguished: hemerythrocytes, amoebocytes, and two morphological types of granular cells. No clusters of specialized cells that had been reported to occur in the trunk coelom of Th. nigra were found in the tentacular coelom. The corresponding types of coelomocytes from the tentacular and trunk coelomic cavities were shown to differ in size. These two coeloms are completely separated in sipunculans.  相似文献   

11.
 The gills of three species of Branchipolynoe have been studied in order to better understand the morphological and anatomical adaptations of their respiratory system. These Polynoidae live commensally inside the pallial cavity of different species of Bathymodiolus (Mytilidae), found clustered near deep-sea hydrothermal vents and cold seeps, and which harbor chemolithoautotrophic bacteria in their gills. As the mussels exploit hydrothermal fluid, the pallial cavity is perfused with a sulfide-rich hydrothermal water. The gills of Branchipolynoe species are well-developed branched outgrows of the body wall, located on the parapodia, and filled with coelomic fluid. They do not contain blood vessels. Living animals are red, due to the presence of extracellular hemoglobins in the coelom. The gill epidermis is made of supporting cells and a few ciliated cells arranged in longitudinal rows along the branches. Myoepithelial and ciliated cells line the interior of the coelomic cavity which contains the respiratory pigments. Coelomic fluid circulation inside the gills and body cavity is probably facilitated by both the cilia and myoepithelial contractions. The cuticle, the epidermis, and the coelomic epithelium are completely devoid of bacteria. The gill surface areas per unit body weight and the minimum diffusion distances, between external milieu and coelomic hemoglobins, have been calculated and compared with data already obtained on vascular gills of littoral or hydrothermal species of Polychaeta. In Branchipolynoe species, the respiratory surface area is very large, similar to that of a free-living hydrothermal species Alvinella pompejana, and the minimum diffusion distance is short, similar to that of the littoral species Arenicola marina. Although the organization of these coelomic gills in Branchipolynoe species is totally different from that of usual vascular gills, their characteristics represent a unique and effective respiratory system in Polynoidae which has adapted to the hypoxic and sulfide-rich micro-habitat which probably holds in the mantle cavity of vent mussels. In the gill epidermis, numerous secondary and large compound lysosomes are present which might be involved in sulfide detoxification. Accepted: 5 August 1998  相似文献   

12.
Morris, V.B., Selvakumaraswamy, P., Whan, R., and Byrne, M. 2011. The coeloms in a late brachiolaria larva of the asterinid sea star Parvulastra exigua: deriving an asteroid coelomic model. —Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 92 : 266–275. The coeloms and their interconnexions in a late pre‐metamorphic brachiolaria larva of a sea star are described from the series of images in the frontal, transverse and sagittal planes obtained by confocal laser scanning microscopy. A larval, brachial coelom connects with the coeloms of the adult rudiment that lie posteriorly. The connexion is through the anterior coelom, which lies over the head of the archenteron, to the right anterior coelom and then to the left posterior coelom through the ventral horn of the left posterior coelom. The right posterior coelom is a separate coelom. The hydrocoele is on the larval left side separated from other coeloms except for a connexion to the anterior coelom. On the larval right side, the anterior coelom and right anterior coelom connect with the pore canal that opens to the exterior at the hydropore. From these coeloms, we derived an asteroid coelomic model comprising the larval left and right coeloms linked over the head of the archenteron by a common anterior coelom. The asymmetry of the hydrocoele and the left posterior coelom on the left side linked through the common anterior coelom to the right side, with the external opening, translates into the oral and aboral coeloms of the adult stage. The coelomic model has application in the search for morphological homology between the echinoderm classes and the deuterostome phyla.  相似文献   

13.
This research is part of a study on the ultrastructure of coelomocytes and cellular complexes from the body cavity of sipunculans. New free-swimming elements called microvillar cells in the trunk coelom of Thysanocardia nigra Ikeda, 1904 are examined using transmission electron microscopy. The cell harbors a giant vesicle filled with a fibrous matrix and rosettes of minute osmiophilous granules. The nucleus is peripheral, and a few cell organelles are situated between the cell membrane and the vesicular membrane. The cell membrane bears numerous microvilli with enlarged apical points. Numerous small microvillar vesicles swimming in the coelomic fluid separate from the microvillar cells. The functional morphology of coelomocytes and cellular complexes is discussed.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Biologiya Morya, Maiorova, Adrianov.  相似文献   

14.
Ulf Jondelius 《Zoomorphology》1986,106(4):254-259
Summary The epidermal ultrastructure of Anoplodium stichopi Bock 1925 (Platyhelminthes, Dalyellioida, Umagillidae) was studied using transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The species lives in the perivisceral coelom of the aspidochirote holothurian Stichopus tremulus Gunnerus 1767. Two types of cells were observed in the epidermis of A. stichopi: ciliated cuboidal epithelial cells and nonciliated pear-shaped cells. The surface of the ciliated epidermal cells is folded into anastomosing ridges. Numerous coated vesicles are subjacent to the surface folds and mitochondria are abundant just below them. Observations indicate that A. stichopi takes up nutrients pinocytically from the coelomic fluid of the host. The ciliation of A. stichopi is sparse.  相似文献   

15.
The nervous system of the maldanid polychaetes Clymenella torquata (Leidy) and Euclymene oerstedi (Claparede) (= Caesicirrus neglectus [Arwidsson, '11-'12]) retains its primitive association with the epidermis. It shows only slight metamerism in the presence of larger collections of neurones opposite the parapodia and of larger nerves at the segmental boundaries. Multicellular giant fibers are present in the ventral nerve cord; giant neurones which show a characteristic pattern of distribution in each species are also present. The cerebral ganglia supply nerves to the prostomial wall, nuchal grooves and the wall of the buccal cavity, and a pair of large nerves from the circumpharyngeal connectives also appear to join the buccal system. The organs of special sense are the elongated prostomial nuchal grooves, and prostomial ocelli in Euclymene but not in Clymenella. Statocysts are absent. Four pairs of nephromixia are present. They lie in the aseptate anterior trunk, in chaetigers 5–9 of Clymenella, and 6–10 of Euclymene. The nephridiopores lie at the ventral ends of the neuropodia of chaetigers 6–9 and 7–10, respectively. Each nephromixium consists of coelomostome, tubule and contractile bladder. The wall of the tubule and bladder consists of both excretory and ciliated cells. Most of the cytoplasm of the latter forms a bounding layer at the outer surface. The cytoplasm of the excretory cells contains lipid material and appears to synthesize lipofuscin. The tips of the excretory cells swell, fill with granules, and break off in the form of vesicles which are periodically expelled in clouds from the nephridiopores. Glycogen is present, especially in the ciliated cells of the tubule and coelomostome. Granules of a lipoid nature accumulate in (or between) cells of the nephridia, epidermis, and some regions of the gut, and may be excretory. Lipid granules also appear to be synthesized by coelomocytes which eventually end up in masses in the ventrolateral coelomic cavities of the tail. The nephridia act as gonoducts, but show no seasonal variation in either size or histological structure.  相似文献   

16.
The ultrastructure of the tentacles was studied in the sipunculid worm Thysanocardia nigra. Flexible digitate tentacles are arranged into the dorsal and ventral tentacular crowns at the anterior end of the introvert of Th. nigra. The tentacle bears oral, lateral, and aboral rows of cilia; on the oral side, there is a longitudinal groove. Each tentacle contains two oral tentacular canals and an aboral tentacular canal. The oral side of the tentacle is covered by a simple columnar epithelium, which contains large glandular cells that secrete their products onto the apical surface of the epithelium. The lateral and aboral epithelia are composed of cuboidal and flattened cells. The tentacular canals are lined with a flattened coelomic epithelium that consists of podocytes with their processes and multiciliated cells. The tentacular canals are continuous with the radial coelomic canals of the head and constitute the terminal parts of the tentacular coelom, which shows a highly complex morphology. Five tentacular nerves and circular and longitudinal muscle bands lie in the connective tissue of the tentacle wall. Similarities and differences in the tentacle morphology between Th. nigra and other sipunculan species are discussed.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Biologiya Morya, Maiorova, Adrianov.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract The spongy body of Davidaster rubiginosa, D. discoidea, and Comactinia meridionalis, is an axial haemal plexus consisting of two structurally similar, but positionally distinct, regions: an oral circumesophageal part and an aboral part which lies lateral to the axial organ. The axial organ is a large axial blood vessel which is infiltrated by hollow cellular tubes lined with monociliated epithelial cells. The spongy body plexus is a tangle of small blood vessels overlain by podocytes and myocytes. The spongy body and the axial organ are situated in the axial coelom, which is confluent with the perivisceral coelom, the water vascular system, and the parietal canals. The parietal canals open to the exterior via ciliated tegmenal ducts and surface pores. The crinoid spongy body is morphologically similar to the axial gland of asteroids, ophiuroids, and echinoids (AOE). Although the axial glands of these three classes of echinoderms are mutually homologous structures, the homology of the crinoid spongy body and the AOE axial gland is questionable because of differences in organization and developmental origin. Alternatively, the crinoid spongy body may be homologous to asteroid gastric haemal tufts, which are podocyte-covered blood vessels suspended in the perivisceral coelom. The functional organization of the spongy body suggests a filtration nephridium and predicts an excretory function. An alternative hypothesis is that the spongy body is a site of nutrient transfer from the blood vascular system to the perivisceral coelom.  相似文献   

18.
The ultrastructure of the axial organ of Asterias amurensis has been studied The organ is a network of canals of the axial coelom separated by haemocoelic spaces. The axial coelom is lined with two types of monociliary cells: podocytes and musculo-epithelial cells. Podocytes form numerous basal processes adjacent to the basal lamina on the coelomic side. Musculo-epithelial cells form processes running along the basal lamina. Some bundles of these processes wrapped in the basal lamina pass through haemocoelic spaces between neighboring coelomic canals. It is hypothesized that the axial organ serves for filtration of fluid from haemocoelic spaces into the axial coelom cavity, from which urine is excreted through the madreporite to the exterior.  相似文献   

19.
The dependence of proboscis eversion on the behaviour of the trunk coelom and the effect of increasing the external resistance to eversion have been investigated in Arenicola marina (L.).Two types of proboscis eversion are distinguished; Type I, in which there is an increase of 50–100% in the volume of the head region and where the high pressures recorded in the trunk coelom are needed, it is suggested, to force fluid into the head coelom; Type II, in which the volume change in the head region is small and where simultaneous recordings of head and trunk coelomic pressures indicate that the head coelom can be isolated from the rest of the coelom.Pressures in the trunk are only related to the extent of proboscis eversion when there is a high external resistance to eversion.  相似文献   

20.
In comparison with Asteroidea, the axial complex of ophiuroids has some important features, which are the result of shifting of the madreporite from the aboral side to the oral side. In contrast to Asteroidea, the stone canal of ophiuroids connects with the water ring from the outside, not from the inside. In Ophiuroidea, the somatocoelomic perihaemal coelom is closer to the mouth than the axocoelomic ring. The water ring of ophiuroids is shifted to the oral side relative to the perihaemal coelomic rings. The genital coelom and gastric haemal ring are located on the outer side of the axial complex, whereas in Asteroidea, they are located on the inner side. The pericardial part of the axial organ is situated on the oral side. The interradial sections of the genital coelom and genital haemal ring are descended to the oral side. Our hypothesis considers that the ancestors of ophiuroids turned the aboral side of the animal to the substratum. It caused shifting of the madreporite to the oral side and closing of the anus.  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