Anchorage and retraction of nematocytes in the tentacles of the cubopolyp Carybdea marsupialis are mediated by a species-specific mesogleal support |
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Authors: | R. Golz |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institut für Neuro- und Verhaltensbiologie, Hüfferstrasse 1, D-48149 Münster, Germany |
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Abstract: | Each tentacle of the cubopolyp Carybdea marsupialis is armed with only a single nematocyte at its tip. The correct position of the nematocyte is maintained by a crown-shaped cup formed by the mesoglea. In maximally contracted tentacles, the nematocyte and 7–10 surrounding accessory cells are completely retracted into an ectodermal invagination. A belt of muscle cells revealing a distinct cross-striation in specimens labelled with fluorescein-isothiocyanate-phalloidin is located around the basal part of the nematocyte. These muscle cells are linked both to the mesogleal cup and to the nematocyte by specialized desmosomal contact zones. An additional set of long slender muscle strands runs through the complete length of the tentacles. Their myofibrils reveal only a weak striation pattern. Whereas the contraction of the tentacles seems to depend on the slender muscle strands, the retraction of the apical cell complex is thought to be mediated by the cross-striated muscle belt. |
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Keywords: | Actomyosin Desmosomes Muscle cells Nematocytes Phalloidin Carybdea marsupialis (Cnidaria) |
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