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1.
Tentacles armed with stinging cells (cnidocytes) are a defining trait of the cnidarians, a phylum that includes sea anemones, corals, jellyfish, and hydras. While cnidarian tentacles are generally characterized as structures evolved for feeding and defense, significant variation exists between the tentacles of different species, and within the same species across different life stages and/or body regions. Such diversity suggests cryptic distinctions exist in tentacle function. In this paper, we use confocal and transmission electron microscopy to contrast the structure and development of tentacles in the moon jellyfish, Aurelia species 1. We show that polyp oral tentacles and medusa marginal tentacles display markedly different cellular and muscular architecture, as well as distinct patterns of cellular proliferation during growth. Many structural differences between these tentacle types may reflect biomechanical solutions to different feeding strategies, although further work would be required for a precise mechanistic understanding. However, differences in cell proliferation dynamics suggests that the two tentacle forms lack a conserved mechanism of development, challenging the textbook-notion that cnidarian tentacles can be homologized into a conserved bauplan.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Ultrastructural study of the buccal tentacles of Holothuria forskali revealed that each tentacle bears numerous apical papillae. Each papilla consists of several differentiated sensory buds.The epidermis of the buds is composed of three cell types, i.e. mucus cells, ciliated cells, and glandular vesicular cells (GV cells). The GV cells have apical microvilli; they contain bundles of cross striated fibrillae associated with microtubules. Ciliated cells have a short non-motile cilium. Bud epidermal cells intimately contact an epineural nervous plate which is located slightly above the basement membrane of the epidermis. The epineural plate of each bud connects with the hyponeural nerve plexus of the tentacle. This nerve plexus consists of an axonic meshwork surrounded in places by sheath cells. The buccal tentacles have well-developed mesothelial muscles. Direct innervation of these muscles by the hyponeural nerve plexus was not seen.It is suggested that the buccal tentacles of H. forskali are sensory organs. They would recognize the organically richest areas of the sediment surface through the chemosensitive abilities of their apical buds. Tentacles presumably trap particles by wedging them between their buds and papillae.  相似文献   

3.
Tentacles from representatives of all four classes of the phylum Cnidaria were examined using antibodies against the neuropeptides FMRFamide and RFamide to reveal the organization of neurons and nerve nets associated with cnidocytes. The tentacles of all species examined contained FMRFamide- or RFamide-immunoreactive neurons, in varying densities. In representatives from the Scyphozoa, Hydrozoa, and Cubozoa, the FMRFamide-immunoreactive neurons formed plexuses at the base of the cnidocyte assemblages; in anthozoans, the absence of discrete assemblies of cnidocytes precluded visual co-localization of cnidocytes and immunoreactive neurons. In all four classes, immunoreactive sensory cells connected these peptidergic nerve nets to the surface of the tentacle. These findings suggest that members of all four cnidarian classes share a common organizational pattern, and it is proposed that this peptidergic innervation may be involved in the chemosensory regulation of cnidocyte discharge.  相似文献   

4.
 The tentacular apparatus of Coeloplana bannworthi consists of a pair of tentacles which bear, on their ventral side, numerous tentilla. Each tentacle extends from and retracts into a tentacular sheath. Tentacles and tentilla are made up of an axial core covered by an epidermis. The epidermis includes six cell types: covering cells, two types of gland cells (mucous cells and granular gland cells), two types of sensory cells (ciliated cells and hoplocytes), and collocytes, this last cell type being exclusively found in the tentilla. The core is made up of a fibrillar matrix, the mesoglea, which is crossed by nerve processes and two kinds of smooth muscle cells. Regular muscle cells are present in both the tentacles and tentilla while giant muscle cells occur exclusively in the tentilla. The retraction of the tentacular apparatus is an active phenomenon due to the contraction of both types of muscle cells. The extension is a passive phenomenon that occurs when the muscle cells relax. Tentacles and tentilla first extend slightly due to the rebound elasticity of the mesogleal fibers and then drag forces exerted by the water column enable the tentacular apparatus to lengthen totally. Once the tentacles and tentilla are extended, gland cells, sensory cells, and collocytes are exposed to the water column. Any swimming planktonic organism may stimulate the sensory cilia which initiates tentillum movements. Pegs of hoplocytes can then more easily contact the prey which results in a slight elevation of the nearby collocytes, the last being responsible for gluing the prey to the tentilla. Accepted: 1 April 1997  相似文献   

5.
The location of cerebral neurons innervating the three recently described flexor muscles involved in the orientation of the posterior tentacles was investigated by applying parallel retrograde Co- and Ni-lysine tracing via the olfactory and the peritentacular nerves. Their innervation patterns in the flexor muscles were studied by applying anterograde neurobiotin tracings via these nerves. The labeled neurons are clustered in eight groups in the cerebral ganglion. They send both common and distinct innervation pathways to the flexor and the tegumental muscles and to the tentacular retractor muscle. The common pathway reaches the muscles via the olfactory nerve, whereas the distinct pathways innervate via the internal and external peritentacular nerves. The three anchoring points of the three flexor muscles at the base of the tentacle outline the directions of three force vectors generated by the contraction of the muscles and enable the protracted tentacle to bend around a basal pivot. In the light of earlier physiological and the present anatomical findings, we suggest that the common innervation pathway to the muscles is required for tentacle withdrawal and the retractor mechanism, whereas the distinct pathways primarily serve the bending of the protracted posterior tentacles during foraging.  相似文献   

6.
In this study, we describe the microstructure and ultrastructure of the epipodial papillae and epipodial tentacles of Haliotis tuberculata using light and electron microscopy. The epipodial papillae vary morphologically; they are subdivided into several subpapillae whose surface is covered by small micropapillae. The epipodial tentacles are large extendable conically elongated structures whose surface is differentiated in two regions: the dorsal region with long corrugated folds, and a ventral region composed of three parts, a basal part with the same structure as the dorsal, a middle part with shorter corrugated folds and an apical part with large micropapillae. Although the thin sections and ultrastructure examination show that the epithelium of both organs is morphologically similar and composed of supporting cells, sensory cells and different types of secretory cells, there is a certain specialization in their secretory product. Although the epithelium of both structures was positive for acidic glycoconjugates, the tentacle epithelium was also positive for neutral sugars. Further specific differences were revealed by lectin histochemistry. Because papillae and tentacles can be extended or retracted depending on environmental conditions, they probably have tactile and olfactory functions.  相似文献   

7.
《Journal of morphology》2017,278(5):718-733
Tentacles are the main food‐gathering organs of bryozoans. The most common design is a hollow tube of extracellular matrix (ECM), covered with ten columns of epithelial cells on the outside, and a coelothelium on the inside. Nerves follow the ECM, going between the bases of some epidermal cells. The tentacle musculature includes two bundles formed by myoepithelial cells of the coelothelium. The tentacles of freshwater (phylactolaemate) bryozoans, however, differ somewhat in structure from those of marine bryozoans. Here, we describe the tentacles of three species of phylactolaemates, comparing them to gymnolaemates and stenolaemates. Phylactolaemate tentacles tend to be longer, and with more voluminous coeloms. The composition of the frontal cell row and the number of frontal nerves is variable in freshwater bryozoans, but constant in marine groups. Abfrontal cells form a continuous row in Phylactolaemata, but occur intermittently in other two classes. Phylactolaemata lack the microvillar cuticle reported in Gymnolaemata. Abfrontal sensory tufts are always composed of pairs of mono‐ and/or biciliated cells. This arrangement differs from individual abfrontal ciliary cells of other bryozoans: monociliated in Stenolaemata and monociliated and multiciliated ones in Gymnolaemata. In all three groups, however, ciliated abfrontal cells probably serve as mechanoreceptors. We confirm previously described phylactolemate traits: an unusual arrangement of two‐layered coelothelium lining the lateral sides of the tentacle and oral slits in the intertentacular membrane. As previously reported, tentacle movements involved in feeding differ between bryozoan groups, with phylactolaemates tending to have slower movements than both gymnolaemates and stenolaemates, and a narrower behavioral repertoire than gymnolaemates. The morphological and ultrastructural differences between the freshwater species we studied and marine bryozoans may be related to these functional differences. Muscle organization, tentacle and coelom size, and degree of confluence between tentacle and lophophore coeloms probably account for much of the observed behavioral variability.  相似文献   

8.
The diversity of sensory cilia on Caenorhabditis elegans neurons allows the animal to detect a variety of sensory stimuli. Sensory cilia are assembled by intraflagellar transport (IFT) kinesins, which transport ciliary precursors, bound to IFT particles, along the ciliary axoneme for incorporation into ciliary structures. Using fluorescence microscopy of living animals and serial section electron microscopy of high pressure-frozen, freeze-substituted IFT motor mutants, we found that two IFT kinesins, homodimeric OSM-3 kinesin and heterotrimeric kinesin II, function in a partially redundant manner to build full-length amphid channel cilia but are completely redundant for building full-length amphid wing (AWC) cilia. This difference reflects cilia-specific differences in OSM-3 activity, which serves to extend distal singlets in channel cilia but not in AWC cilia, which lack such singlets. Moreover, AWC-specific chemotaxis assays reveal novel sensory functions for kinesin II in these wing cilia. We propose that kinesin II is a "canonical" IFT motor, whereas OSM-3 is an "accessory" IFT motor, and that subtle changes in the deployment or actions of these IFT kinesins can contribute to differences in cilia morphology, cilia function, and sensory perception.  相似文献   

9.
Brachiopoda is a relict group of invertebrate filter feeders that used a tentacle organ, lophophore, for capturing food particles from the water column. Brachiopod extinction apparently occurred due to low productivity of their filtering organ in comparison with more advanced filter-feeders. Investigation of the filtering mechanism of modern brachiopods is essential to understanding their evolutionary fate. This study is devoted to the rejection mechanism of large waste particles from the plectolophous lophophore of brachiopod Coptothyris grayi. The waste particles gather inside of the lophophore on the outer side of the brachial fold. The particles form rows along frontal grooves of outer tentacles and are carried successively to the tentacle tips and move along them, slimed by mucus. One portion of the particles comes off the lophophore and falls down the mantle, while another part is carried to the abfrontal surface of the tentacles. Due to repeated reversals of abfrontal cilia, the particles wavily move along the abfrontal surface of tentacles. Such movement contributes to the secretion of mucus and the formation of particle clots. The clots come off the lophophore and fall down the mantle. The particles are transported along the mantle by cilia to the anterior part of the mantle margin. Here the ciliary reversals that facilitate secretion of mucus and formation of pseudofeces also take place. The latter takes away from the mantle cavity. Thus, only outer tentacles participate in the rejection of large waste particles from the lophophore. Ciliary reversals of the abfrontal surface of tentacles and the mantle are discovered in brachiopods for the first time. This facilitates the additional secretion of mucus and formation of pseudofeces, easing their exit from the mantle cavity. The results contribute to the knowledge of lophophore function and evolution of tentacle organs in Bilateria.  相似文献   

10.
The epidermis of the tentacles of Phoronis australis consists of six cell types: supporting cells, choanocyte-like sensory cells, both types monociliated, secretory A-cells with a mucous secretion, and three kinds of B-cells with mucoprotein secretions. On cross-sections of the tentacle, one can distinguish four faces: the frontal one, heavily ciliated and located between the two frontolateral rows of sensory cells, the lateral and the abfrontal ones. The orientation of the basal structures of the cilia is related to the direction of their beat. The basiepidermal nervous system is grouped mainly at the frontal and abfrontal faces. The basement membrane is thickest on the frontal face and consists of circular collagen fibrils near the epidermis and longitudinal ones near the peritoneum. All peritoneal cells surrounding the mesocoel are provided with smooth longitudinal myofibrils, and isolated axons are situated between these cells and the basement membrane. The wall of the single blood capillary in each tentacle consists of epitheliomuscular cells with circular myofilaments, lying on a thin internal basal lamina; there is no endothelium.  相似文献   

11.
TEM observations of catch tentacles revealed that the tentacle tip epidermis is filled with two size classes of mature holotrich nematocysts and a gland cell filled with electron-dense vesicles. Vesicle production is restricted to upper-middle and tentacle tip regions, whereas holotrich development occurs in the lower-middle and tentacle base regions. Thus, catch tentacles have a maturity gradient along their length, with mature tissues concentrated at the tentacle tip. Occasional feeding tentacle cnidae (microbasic p-mastigophores and basitrichs) and mucus gland cells occur in proximal portions of catch tentacles, but are phagocytized by amoeboid granulocytes and transported to the gastrodermis for further degradation. No feeding tentacle cnidae or mucus cells occur distally in catch tentacles. Unlike catch tentacles, feeding tentacles are homogeneous in structure along their length with enidocytes containing mature spirocysts, microbasic p-mastigophore or basitrich nematocysts distributed along the epithelial surface. Cnidoblasts are recessed beneath cnidocytes, occurring along the nerve plexus. Mucus gland cells and gland cells filled with electron-dense vesicles are present in feeding tentacles, distributed at the epithelial surface. Granular phagocytes are rare in the feeding tentacle tip, but common in the tentacle base.  相似文献   

12.
Nautiloidea is the oldest group within the cephalopoda, and modern Nautilus differs much in its outer morphology from all other recent species; its external shell and pinhole camera eye are the most prominent distinguishing characters. A further unique feature of Nautilus within the cephalopods is the lack of suckers or hooks on the tentacles. Instead, the animals use adhesive structures present on the digital tentacles. Earlier studies focused on the general tentacle morphology and put little attention on the adhesive gland system. Our results show that the epithelial parts on the oral adhesive ridge contain three secretory cell types (columnar, goblet, and cell type 1) that differ in shape and granule size. In the non-adhesive aboral epithelium, two glandular cell types (cell types 2 and 3) are present; these were not mentioned in any earlier study and differ from the cells in the adhesive area. The secretory material of all glandular cell types consists mainly of neutral mucopolysaccharide units, whereas one cell type in the non-adhesive epithelium also reacts positive for acidic mucopolysaccharides. The present data indicate that the glue in Nautilus consists mainly of neutral mucopolysaccharides. The glue seems to be a viscous carbohydrate gel, as known from another cephalopod species. De-attachment is apparently effectuated mechanically, i.e., by muscle contraction of the adhesive ridges and tentacle retraction.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The specialized adhesive exumbrellar tentacles of the limnomedusa Vallentinia gabriella were examined by light microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The adhesive region first differentiates some distance from the tentacle tip. As differentiation proceeds the distal part is reduced and the adhesive region comes to lie at the tentacle tip. The adhesive epithelium consists of flagellated and non-flagellated glandular cells, a few nematocytes, and a nerve plexus. The glandular cells are characterized by electron-dense granules and bundles of microtubules. The microtubules, being anchored to the mesoglea, are oriented parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cell and extend up to the cell apex. It can be assumed that the microtubules are involved in the transport of secretory granules to the cell apex. Bundles of neurites run adjacent to the mesoglea between the basal processes of the glandular cells. The neurites form interneural synapses and synapses with glandular cells. It is suggested that detachment of the specialized adhesive tentacles is under nervous control.  相似文献   

14.
The tentacles of deep-sea holothurians show a wide range of morphological diversity. The present paper examines gross tentacle morphology in surface deposit feeding holothurians from a range of bathymetric depths. Species studied included the elasipods: Oneirophanta mutabilis, Psychropotes longicauda and Benthogone rosea and the aspidochirotids: Paroriza prouhoi, Pseudostichopus sp., Bathyplotes natans and Paroriza pallens. The sympatric abyssal species Oneirophanta mutabilis, Psychropotes longicauda and Pseudostichopus sp. show subtle differences in diet and the structure and filling patterns of the gut that suggest differences in feeding strategies which may represent one mechanism to overcome competition for food resources in an environment where nutrient resources are considered to be, at least periodically, limiting. Interspecific differences in tentacle functional morphology and digestive strategies, which reflects taxonomic diversity could be explained in terms of Sanders'; Stability–Time Hypothesis. Since different tentacle types will turn over sediments to different extents, their impact on sedimentary communities will be enormous so that high diversity in meiofaunal communities may be explained most simply by Dayton and Hessler's Biological Disturbance Hypothesis.  相似文献   

15.
The tentacles of Aglantha have ciliary bands along the sides. Metachronal waves pass along these bands. The strong ciliary currents produced propel water past the tentacles, increasing the probability of prey capture. The ciliated cells are unusual in having many (up to about 500) cilia per cell, where most cnidarian ciliated cells have only one. The cells are also peculiar in containing numerous axonemes without membrane coverings, lying loose in the cytoplasm. Tentacles show independent, rhythmic, slow flexions in the oral direction and groups of tentacles show coordinated, slow flexions as part of a regularly repeated fishing cycle. In both cases, these slow, graded movements are mediated by a slowly conducting system, probably the network of small neurons present in the ectoderm, and are accompanied by ciliary arrests. Much faster, more powerful, coordinated contractions of the tentacles occur in the context of escape behaviour; these are mediated by giant axons which run down the tentacles and are also accompanied by ciliary arrest. Ciliary and muscle effectors evidently share a common motor innervation. Electron microscopy shows that the giant and non-giant nerves both synapse with muscle cells. The latter are joined to the ciliated cells by gap junctions, and it is suggested that whenever the muscles are excited depolarizations spread to the ciliated cells through the gap junctions and cause ciliary arrests. Neuronal control of ciliary activity has not previously been reported in the Hydrozoa.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Abstract. SEM studies of 21 species of marine bryozoans demonstrated that the abfrontal side of the tentacles bears a row of mono- or multiciliated cells, which are presumably sensory. In stenolaemates, the abfrontal cells, as well as the cells at the tentacle tips and the laterofrontal cells, are monociliated. In the 17 gymnolaemate species studied, each tentacle tip bears at least 3 multiciliated cells, each with a tuft of 5–7 stiff cilia of various lengths. On the abfrontal tentacle surface, mono- and multiciliated cells alternate, but all species studied have multiciliated cells at the base and the tip of each tentacle. In live animals, single cilia perform occasional flicks, whereas the tufts of 7–15 cilia on the multiciliated cells are immotile. Length and number of abfrontal cilia vary between species. Two types of multiciliated, putative sensory organs were found on the introvert of some gymnolaemates. One has an apical knob surrounded by a ring of cilia; the other has an apical tuft of cilia. The ultrastructure of the sensory cells of tentacles and introvert was studied in Rhamphostomella ovata . Our observations on both fixed and living material all suggest that these cells are primitive mechanoreceptors. The few species lacking ciliary structures on the introvert have long proximal ciliary tufts on the abfrontal tentacle surface.  相似文献   

18.
The chemical structure, thermal denaturation and nanostructure of collagen, obtained from a cation-exchange separation of the mantle, fins and tentacles of jumbo squid (Dosidicus gigas), were comparatively studied. The main idea of this work, was to provide an in-depth understanding of the interdependence between pyridinoline (Pyr) content, helix chemical structure and nanostructure of squid collagen with squid tissue firmness. The tentacles required more shear force and its collagen presented the higher temperature and enthalpy of transition, than the mantle and fins. The tentacle firmness may be explained by the relatively higher imino amino acid content, proline and lysine hydroxylation degrees and Pyr content of its collagen. Moreover, among the regions studied, the collagen from the tentacles had a more intense β band chain. Also, the Fourier transform infrared analysis and Raman spectra, implied that the collagen in the tentacles, was more intermolecularly ordered than the mantle and fins. Consistent with these results, a comparative evaluation of the surface morphology of the three regions, with atomic force microscopy, suggested a more ordered collagen structure in the tentacles (lower roughness values). Based on the above, collagen from tentacles has a higher degree of molecular order that sustains a higher muscle firmness compared to that of other anatomical regions.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract. The tentacles of ommastrephid squids fuse during embryonic development and remain fused as they grow through hatching, but eventually separate to become two fully functional adult tentacles. The external anatomy of individuals at several post‐hatching ontogenetic stages of three species of ommastrephid squids (Ommastrephes bartramii, Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis, and Hyaloteuthis pelagica) was examined using scanning electron microscopy and morphometrics. The fusion of the transverse muscle mass of the tentacles was examined using light microscopy. Five ontogenetic stages of tentacle separation were defined based on landmark features such as the extent of the fusion and the presence of suckers or sucker buds at the distal tip. The total tentacle length and fused tentacle length reached a maximum when the dorsal mantle length (ML) equaled 3–4 mm (H. pelagica) or 4–6 mm (O. bartramii, S. oualaniensis), and then decreased with increasing ML. The average split length (measured from the base of the tentacles to the point of tentacle fusion) increased gradually with increasing ML, and the separate tentacle diameter was roughly half the diameter of the fused portion at all sizes. In all three species, separation of the fused tentacles began earlier in development (2–3‐mm ML) and was more advanced at smaller sizes than previously reported. The sizes presented here are conservative because excess epithelium at the location of the split may disguise the actual site of separation. Post‐separation tentacles were much shorter than the arms, and the carpal region appeared torn in 2 of the 4 specimens of S. oualaniensis examined. Finally, none of the original distal tip suckers were retained on the post‐separation tentacles of S. oualaniensis. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that the tentacles separate gradually then rupture at the “wrist” (presumptive carpus), and argue against the possibility of prey capture by the fused tentacles.  相似文献   

20.
The anatomy of three novel flexor muscles in the posterior tentacles of Helix pomatia is described. The muscles originate from the ventral side of the sensory pad and are anchored at different sites in the base of the tentacle stem. The muscles span the tentacle and always take the length of the stem which depends on the rate of tentacle protrusion indicating that the muscles are both contractile and extremely stretchable. The three anchoring points at the base of the stem determine three space axes along which the contraction of a muscle or the synchronous contraction of the muscles can move the tentacle in space.  相似文献   

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