Abstract: | ![]() A comparison is made between the fine structure of yellow corpuscles and white corpuscles located within the kidneys of the holostean fish, Amia calva L. The yellow corpuscles are composed of epithelial cells possessing all the features of steroid-producing tissues, namely an abundance of vacuoles, tubular smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria with tubular cristae. The Golgi apparatus is also a conspicuous component of their cytoplasm. These cells are homologous to adrenocortical cells of higher vertebrates and they have cytoplasmic projections which extend into the lumina of surrounding sinusoids. The white corpuscles possess epithelial cells of variable appearance but all cells contain secretory granules and an extensive rough endoplasmic reticulum. The secretory granules appear to originate at the Golgi apparatus and occasionally are observed intact in the intercellular space. However the method of release of these granules was not clearly defined. These corpuscles are similar to the corpuscles of Stannius which have been described in modern bony fish. The presence of multivesicular bodies and smooth endoplasmic reticulum in some cells may reflect the origin of the corpuscles of Stannius from the tubular nephron. A. calva appears to be a suitable organism for comparative studies into the function of the adrenocortical homolog and corpuscles of Stannius in “primitive” fish. |