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 46 毫秒
1.
Summary The skin of the lizard, Anolis carolinensis, changes rapidly from bright green to a dark brown color in response to melanophore stimulating hormone (MSH). Chromatophores responsible for color changes of the skin are xanthophores which lie just beneath the basal lamina containing pterinosomes and carotenoid vesicles. Iridophores lying immediately below the xanthophores contain regularly arranged rows of reflecting platelets. Melanophores containing melanosomes are present immediately below the iridophores. The ultrastructural features of these chromatophores and their pigmentary organelles are described. The color of Anolis skin is determined by the position of the melanosomes within the melanophores which is regulated by MSH and other hormones such as norepinephrine. Skins are green when melanosomes are located in a perinuclear position within melanophores. In response to MSH, they migrate into the terminal processes of the melanophores which overlie the xanthophores above, thus effectively preventing light penetration to the iridophores below, resulting in skins becoming brown. The structural and functional characteristics of Anolis chromatophores are compared to the dermal chromatophore unit of the frog.This study was supported in part by GB-8347 from the National Science Foundation.Contribution No. 244, Department of Biology, Wayne State University.The authors are indebted to Dr. Joseph T. Bagnara for his encouragement during the study and to Dr. Wayne Ferris for his advice and the use of his electron microscope laboratory.  相似文献   

2.
In addition to melanophores and xanthophores, there existed two types of iridophore in the dermis of the scalycheek damselfish, Pomacentrus lepidogenys. There are dendritic iridophores which reflect white light-rays by Tyndall scattering, and the round or somewhat ellipsoidal iridophores which reflect rays with a relatively narrow spectral peak from blue to green through the non-ideal thin-film interference. Most of the dendritic iridophores were covered with xanthophores and were situated over melanophores, thus constituting a kind of chromatophore unit which produces a yellow or yellowish-green color. The characteristic yellowish-green hue of the integument results from a compound effect of small contributions by more elementary colors. During color changes of the skin, the position of the spectral peak does not shift. Unlike the iridophores of the blue damselfish, both types of iridophore of the scalycheek damselfish were found to be inactive. It appears, therefore, that the aggregation and dispersion of pigment within the melanophores is the primary mechanism responsible for the changes in color of this species.  相似文献   

3.
Clonal cultures were performed with the use of neural crest cells and their derivatives, chromatophores, from Xenopus laevis in order to elucidate the state of commitment in early embryogenesis. Neural crest cells that outgrew from neural tube explants were isolated and plated at clonal density. Cloned neural crest cells differentiated and gave rise to colonies that consisted of 1) only melanophores, 2) only xanthophores, or 3) melanophores and xanthophores. Xanthophores and iridophores, which differentiated in vitro, were also isolated and cloned. Cloned xanthophores proliferated in a stable fashion and did not lose their properties. On the other hand, cloned iridophores converted into melanophores as they proliferated. These results suggest that there is heterogeneity in the state of commitment of neural crest cells immediately after migration with regard to chromatophore differentiation and that iridophore determination is relatively labile (at least in vitro), whereas melanophore and xanthophore phenotypes are stable.  相似文献   

4.
Microscopic observation of the skin of Plestiodon lizards, which have body stripes and blue tail coloration, identified epidermal melanophores and three types of dermal chromatophores: xanthophores, iridophores, and melanophores. There was a vertical combination of these pigment cells, with xanthophores in the uppermost layer, iridophores in the intermediate layer, and melanophores in the basal layer, which varied according to the skin coloration. Skin with yellowish-white or brown coloration had an identical vertical order of xanthophores, iridophores, and melanophores, but yellowish-white skin had a thicker layer of iridophores and a thinner layer of melanophores than did brown skin. The thickness of the iridophore layer was proportional to the number of reflecting platelets within each iridophore. Skin showing green coloration also had three layers of dermal chromatophores, but the vertical order of xanthophores and iridophores was frequently reversed. Skin showing blue color had iridophores above the melanophores. In addition, the thickness of reflecting platelets in the blue tail was less than in yellowish-white or brown areas of the body. Skin with black coloration had only melanophores.  相似文献   

5.
The pigmentary system of skin from adult specimens of the amphibian urodele Salamandra atra aurorae was investigated by light microscope, electron microscope, and biochemical studies. Yellow (dorsum and head) and black (flank and belly) skin was tested. Three chromatophore types are present in yellow skin: xanthophores, iridophores, and melanophores. Xanthophores are located in the epidermis whereas iridophores and melanophores are found in the dermis. Xanthophores contain types I, II, and III pterinosomes. Some pterinosomes are very electron-dense. Black skin has a single type of chromatophore: the melanophores. Some melanophores are located in the epidermis. In contrast to the dermal melanophores, these present, in addition to typical melanosomes, organelles with different morphology and vesicles having a limiting membrane and containing little amorphous material. Both skin types present some pteridines and flavins, though they are qualitatively and quantitatively more abundant in yellow skin extracts.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Summary The subepidermal distribution of xanthophores and melanophores is investigated in embryos ofTriturus alpestris with a uniform (stage 28+) and a banded melanophore pattern (stage 35/36). In ultrathin head and trunk sections from stage 35/36 embryos which externally show longitudinal dorsal and lateral melanophore bands in the trunk and less compact continuations of the dorsal bands in the head, xanthophores were discovered in addition to melanophores. Melanophores contain melanosomes while xanthophores which are not externally visible, are recognized by their pterinosomes. Both chromatophore cell types are mutually exclusively distributed on the epidermal basement membrane (bm). Mesenchymal cells seemed not to be able to replace them, except on the bm of the corneal epithelium where there were only mesenchymal cells. In head and trunk sections from stage 28+ embryos which externally show a distribution of uniformly scattered melanophores on the dorsolateral halves, melanophores were found on the dorsolateral neural crest migration route. No epidermal bm was present and xanthophores were undetectable. In ventrolateral and ventral portions of embryos of both stages no chromatophores occurred. This investigation defines the histological localization of melanophores and xanthophores in embryos with a typical uniform and banded melanophore arrangement; a subsequent study analyzes when xanthophores appear and how they arrange with melanophores in alternating zones.  相似文献   

8.
Mechanisms controlling pigment movements in the melanophore of the blue damselfish, Chrysiptera cyanea, were studied. Histological observations revealed that the melanophore had three-dimensionally developed processes to envelop overlying small iridophores, and thus participated in the construction of a simple dermal chromatophore unit. Nervous stimulation, catecholamines and melatonin brought about melanosome aggregation in the melanophore. The actions of the nervous stimulation and catecholamines were antagonized by alpha adrenolytic agents. A beta adrenergic agonist, metaproterenol, adenosine and adenine nucleotides, and alpha-MSH acted as pigment-dispersing agents. These results indicate that the melanophore of the present material is controlled quite orthodoxly by adrenergic nerves and endocrines, notwithstanding the fact that it has quite a unique morphology among fish species, and that its motile rate is remarkably high.  相似文献   

9.
Three types of pigment cells were isolated and cultured from larval Rana pipiens, and their attachment, maintenance, and proliferation were examined in the presence of extra-cellular matrix constituents (ECMs) in primary cell culture. The initial profile of pigment cell types present on day 2 of culture reflects the relative attachment of the cells to the dishes. Changes in the numbers of cells present after day 2 reflects the influence of factors present in the culture media on the maintenance, proliferation, or detachment of each type of pigment cell. Fetal bovine serum (FBS) promoted melanophore expression, but inhibited iridophore expression. FBS had no effect on xanthophores. In contrast, ventral skin conditioned medium (VCM), which contains melanization inhibiting factor, strongly stimulated iridophore expression, while it markedly inhibited melanophore expression. VCM had little effect on xanthophores. Of the ECMs tested, collagen type I had no effect on pigment cells. Fibronectin slightly inhibited melanophore expression, while it moderately stimulated iridophores and xanthophores. The stimulatory effect of fibronectin was not as strong as that of FBS or VCM. Laminin was also tested; however, it did not allow pigment cells to attach to the dishes, at least under the culture conditions utilized. The results of these experiments are discussed in terms of the general mechanisms of pigment pattern formation.  相似文献   

10.
Hormone-induced pigment translocation studies were conducted at both the light and electron microscopic levels on cultured dermal iridophores from the Mexican leaf frog, Pachymedusa dacnicolor. Two distinct types of dermal iridophores were characterized which differed in (1) their in vivo locations, (2) their overall morphologies in vitro, (3) their responses to alpha-MSH, ACTH, c-AMP or theophylline, (4) their physical alterations of light, and (5) certain ultrastructural features. One iridophore (Type I) was found to be physiologically responsive to the above hormones or agents by a reversible retraction of cellular processes and a thickening of the cell body, an event which is inhibited by cytochalasin B. The other iridophore (Type II) appeared to be unresponsive. Type I iridophores contain cube-like pigmentary organelles, refractosomes, while Type II iridophores contain larger, bar-shaped refractosomes. In addition, both iridophore types contain 60 and 100 A microfilaments as well as microtubules. By in large, micorfilaments were found within microvilli, beneath and parallel to the plasma membrane and in the perinuclear region. Occasionally, bundles of 100 A microfilaments were found between layers of refractosomes in Type I iridophores. These results are discussed in relation to hormone-induced changes in cell shape.  相似文献   

11.
Wild-collected adults of Bombina orientalis are bright green dorsally and red to red-orange ventrally. As a prelude to an analysis of the differentiation of pigment cells in developing B. orientalis, we describe structural and chemical aspects of the fully differentiated pigment pattern of the “normal” adult. Structurally, differences between dorsal green and ventral red skin are summarized as follows: (1) Dorsal green skin contains a “typical” dermal chromatophore unit comprised of melanophores, iridophores, and xanthophores. Red skin contains predominantly carotenoid-containing xanthophores (erythrophores), and skin from black spot areas contains only melanophores. (2) In ventral red skin, there is also a thin layer of deep-lying iridophores that presumably are not involved in the observed color pattern. (3) Xanthophores of red and green skin are morphologically distinguishable from each other. Dorsal skin xanthophores contain both pterinosomes and carotenoid vesicles; ventral skin xanthophores contain only carotenoid vesicles. Carotenoid vesicles in dorsal xanthophores are much larger but less electron dense than comparable structures in ventral xanthophores. The presence of carotenes in ventral skin accounts for the bright red-orange color of the belly of this frog. Similar pigments are also present in green skin, but in smaller quantities and in conjunction with both colored (yellow) and colorless pteridines. From spectral data obtained for xanthophore pigments and structural data obtained from the size and arrangement of reflecting platelets in the iridophore layer, we attempt to explain the phenomenon of observed green color in B. orientalis.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The structural changes in the chromatophores of Hyla arborea related to changes in skin color were studied by electron microscopy and reflectance microspectrophotometry. During a change from a light to a darker green color, the melanosomes of the melanophores disperse and finally surround the iridophores and partly the xanthophores. The iridophores change from cup-shape to a cylindrical or conical shape with a simultaneous change in the orientation of the platelets from being parallel to the upper surface of the iridophores to being more irregular. The xanthophores change from lens-shape to plate-shape. The color change from green to grey seems always to go through a transitional black-green or dark olive green to dark grey. During this change the xanthophores migrate down between the iridophores, and in grey skins they are sometimes found beneath them. The pterinosomes gather in the periphery of the cell, while the carotenoid vesicles aggregate around the nucleus. The iridophores in grey skin are almost ball-shaped with concentric layers of platelets. A lighter grey color arises from a darker grey by an aggregation of melanosomes. The chromatophore values previously defined for Hyla cinerea are applicable in Hyla arborea, and the ultrastructural studies support the assumptions previously made to explain these values.The author wishes to thank Drs. P. Budtz, J. Dyck and L.O. Larsen for valuable discussions and J. Dyck for kindly providing the spectrophotometer granted him by the Danish National Science Foundation. The skilled technical assistance of Mrs. E. Schiøtt Hansen is gratefully acknowledged. Permission was granted by the Springer-Verlag to republish the illustrations of W.J. Schmidt (1920)  相似文献   

13.
In the tadpole of the tree frog Hyla arborea, the color of the dorsal skin was dark brown. Dermal melanophores, xanthophores, and iridophores were scattered randomly under the subepidermal collagen layer (SCL). After metamorphosis, the dorsal color of the animal changed to green and the animal acquired the ability of dramatic color change, demonstrating that the dermal chromatophore unit (DCU) was formed at metamorphosis. Fibroblasts invaded the SCL and divided it into two parts: the stratum spongiosum (SS) and the stratum compactum (SC). The activity of collagenase increased at metamorphosis. The fibroblasts appeared to dissolve the collagen matrix as they invaded the SCL. Then, three types of chromatophores migrated through the SCL and the DCU was formed in the SS. The mechanism how the three types of chromatophores were organized into a DCU is uncertain, but different migration rates of the three chromatophore types may be a factor that determines the position of the chromatophores in the DCU. Almost an equal number of each chromatophore type is necessary to form the DCUs. However, the number of dermal melanophores in the tadpoles was less than the number of xanthophores and iridophores. It was suggested that epidermal melanophores migrated to the dermis at metamorphosis and developed into dermal melanophores. This change may account for smaller number of dermal melanophores available to form the DCUs.  相似文献   

14.
The morphology and organization of chromatophores in the neotropical glass-frog, Centrolenella fleischmanni (family Centrolenidae), were studied with both light and electron microscopes. Four types of pigment cells are described in the dorsal skin. The fine structure of two chromatophores corresponds to the typical amphibian xanthophore and iridophore; one is similar to the unusual melanophore found in phyllomedusine hylids; the fourth cell type is unlike any chromatophore previously described. Pigment granules in the unusual chromatophore are moderately electron-dense and have an irregular shape, suggesting a fluid composition. This pigment appears to be laid down in organelles similar in appearance to pterinosomes. The organization of pigment cells in this species differs from that of other green, leaf-sitting frogs in that there are few discrete groups resembling “dermal chromatophore units.” It is suggested that the unusual new pigment cell contributes significantly to the overall green color of C. fleischmanni.  相似文献   

15.
The pigmentation pattern of ventral skin of the frog Rana esculenta consists mainly of melanophores and iridophores, rather than the three pigment cells (xanthophores, iridophores, and melanophores) which form typical dermal chromatophore units in dorsal skin. The present study deals with the precise localization and identification of the types of pigment cells in relation to their position in the dermal tracts of uncultured or cultured frog skins. Iridophores were observed by dark-field microscopy; both melanophores and iridophores were observed by transmission electron microscopy. In uncultured skins, three levels were distinguished in the dermal tracts connecting the subcutaneous tissue to the upper dermis. Melanophores and iridophores were localized in the upper openings of the tracts directed towards the superficial dermis (level 1). The tracts themselves formed level 2 and contained melanophores and a few iridophores. The inner openings of the tracts made up level 3 in which mainly iridophores were present. These latter openings faced the subcutaneous tissue In cultured skins, such pigment-cell distribution remained unchanged, except at level 2 of the tracts, where pigment cells were statistically more numerous; among these, mosaic pigment cells were sometimes observed.  相似文献   

16.

Introduction

Animal colouration is a trade-off between being seen by intended, intra- or inter-specific receivers while not being seen by the unintended. Many fishes solve this problem by adaptive colouration. Here, we investigate whether this also holds for fluorescent pigments. In those aquatic environments in which the ambient light is dominated by bluish light, red fluorescence can generate high-contrast signals. The marine, cryptic fish Tripterygion delaisi inhabits such environments and has a bright red-fluorescent iris that can be rapidly up- and down-regulated. Here, we described the physiological and cellular mechanism of this phenomenon using a neurostimulation treatment with KCl and histology.

Results

KCl-treatment revealed that eye fluorescence regulation is achieved through dispersal and aggregation of black-pigmented melanosomes within melanophores. Histology showed that globular, fluorescent iridophores on the anterior side of the iris are grouped and each group is encased by finger-like extensions of a single posterior melanophore. Together they form a so-called chromatophore unit. By dispersal and aggregation of melanosomes into and out of the peripheral membranous extensions of the melanophore, the fluorescent iridophores are covered or revealed on the anterior (outside) of the iris.

Conclusion

T. delaisi possesses a well-developed mechanism to control the fluorescent emission from its eyes, which may be advantageous given its cryptic lifestyle. This is the first time chromatophore units are found to control fluorescent emission in marine teleost fishes. We expect other fluorescent fish species to use similar mechanisms in the iris or elsewhere in the body. In contrast to a previously described mechanism based on dendritic fluorescent chromatophores, chromatophore units control fluorescent emission through the cooperation between two chromatophore types: an emitting and an occluding type. The discovery of a second mechanism for fluorescence modulation strengthens our view that fluorescence is a relevant and adaptive component of fish colouration.  相似文献   

17.
The colours of the European tree frog, Hvlu urhorea , depend on three types of chromatophores: in dermo-epidermal direction melanophores, iridophores, and xanthophores. The ability ofthis species to assume a wide range ofcolours implies that very extensive changes in the chromatophores take place, which in turn require control by several regulating factors. The responses of the different chromatophore types to hormones with known melanophore-affecting abilities (α-MSH, β-MSH, ACTH, melatonin) were tested in an in vitro system (freshly explanted skin) using reflectance microspectrophotometry, light microscopy and time-lapse cinemicrography.
α-MSH, β-MSH and ACTH all induce a rapid dispersion of melanosomes during the 10 min after addition. The degree of pigment dispersion induced by ACTH is slightly less than after stimulation with α-MSH or β-MSH.
The iridophores react to MSH or ACTH treatment with a contraction of the entire cell (causing a reduction in reflecting area), and a change in orientation of the platelets, causing a decrease in selective reflectance. The iridophores appear to be especially sensitive to ACTH. A very striking feature of the iridophores when studied with time-lapse cinematography is their strong pulsations (approx. once per minute).
The xanthophores react to MSH and ACTH with a contraction. These cells appear to be sensitive to β-MSH in particular.
Melatonin strongly counteracts the effects of α-MSH, β-MSH and ACTH on all chromatophores.
These studies confirm the dynamic nature not only of the melanophores, but also of the iridophores and xanthophores, as pointed out by Schmidt (1920) and Nielsen (1978a). Furthermore the differences in the time course of the stimulation of the different types of chromatophores by various hormones may provide an experimental basis for the explanation of colour changes in Hyfa arboreu.  相似文献   

18.
There are three genetically controlled iris types found in the pigeon, two of which contain stromal pigment cells, the third lacks pigment cells. The yellow (gravel) and white (pearl) iris types have pigment cells that contain birefringent pigment granules (crystals) and are ultrastructurally similar to iridophores of poikilothermic vertebrates. Both these iris types contain guanine as a major "pigment" and, in addition, the yellow iris contains at least two yellow fluorescing pigments that are tentatively identified as pteridines. The pigment cells of the yellow and white irises are structurally identical differing only in the presence or absence of these yellow pigments. The stromal pigment cells of the white iris correspond in structure and pigment chemistry to classical iridophores although they lack strong irridescence and are therefore perhaps best considered leucophores. The pigment cells of the yellow iris can be considered "reflecting xanthophores" having the combined properties of both classical xanthophores and iridophore/leucophores.  相似文献   

19.
The development of neural crest-derived pigment cells has been studied extensively as a model for cellular differentiation, disease and environmental adaptation. Neural crest-derived chromatophores in the zebrafish (Danio rerio) consist of three types: melanophores, xanthophores and iridiphores. We have identified the zebrafish mutant endzone (enz), that was isolated in a screen for mutants with neural crest development phenotypes, based on an abnormal melanophore pattern. We have found that although wild-type numbers of chromatophore precursors are generated in the first day of development and migrate normally in enz mutants, the numbers of all three chromatophore cell types that ultimately develop are reduced. Further, differentiated melanophores and xanthophores subsequently lose dendricity, and iridiphores are reduced in size. We demonstrate that enz function is required cell autonomously by melanophores and that the enz locus is located on chromosome 7. In addition, zebrafish enz appears to selectively regulate chromatophore development within the neural crest lineage since all other major derivatives develop normally. Our results suggest that enz is required relatively late in the development of all three embryonic chromatophore types and is normally necessary for terminal differentiation and the maintenance of cell size and morphology. Thus, although developmental regulation of different chromatophore sublineages in zebrafish is in part genetically distinct, enz provides an example of a common regulator of neural crest-derived chromatophore differentiation and morphology.  相似文献   

20.
The pigmentary system of the skin from adult specimens of the black alpine salamander Salamandra atra atra was investigated by light microscope, electron microscope, and biochemical studies. Results were compared with those obtained in previous study of the subspecies Salamandra atra aurorae. Unlike Salamandra atra aurorae, which presents epidermal xanthophores and iridophores, Salamandra atra atra is completely melanized, presenting only epidermal and dermal melanophores. The melanosomes in both the epidermis and the dermis appear to derive from a multivesicular premelanosome similar to that in the goldfish, and the epidermal melanosomes are smaller than those in the dermis. Premelanosomes with an internal lamellar matrix were not observed. The biochemical results have shown that in the ethanol extracts obtained from the skin in toto and from the melanosomes, pteridines and flavins are always present and are the same as those extracted from the black skin areas of Salamandra atra aurorae.  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