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1.
The structure of the pore canals and the tubular filaments they contain are described in a series of insects and types of cuticle. In all these cuticles the tubular filaments arise from the plasma membrane of the epidermal cells and they contain argentaffin material, regarded as sclerotin precursors, and lipid-staining material, regarded as wax precursors. These materials are transferred to the inner epicuticle and are exuded over the surface of the outer epicuticle to form the waterproofing layer as described in the preceding paper. They are also transported to those parts of the endocuticle destined to form hard exocuticle. There are no terminations of tubular filaments in the soft cuticle of Manduca larva, in the soft expanding cuticle of Rhodnius, and in the non-sclerotized post-ecdysial endocuticle of Tenebrio. Apis. etc. In the puparium of Calliphora lipid appears to be added by the epidermal cells directly and not by way of tubular filaments. It is confirmed that lipid is a component of sclerotized cuticle.  相似文献   

2.
The ultrastructure of wax glands (integumentary, stigmatic, and peristigmatic glands) was investigated in larvae, cysts, and adult females and males of species belonging to the genera Porphyrophora, Sphaeraspis, and Eurhizococcus. The general organization and cytological characteristics are similar for all glands studied. Each gland is composed of a single layer of 8 to 40 cells. The glandular cells are characterized by a very large quantity of smooth endoplasmic reticulum which forms dense zones throughout the cytoplasm, but is always placed near the collecting canals in the presence of mitochondria. Each cell has a central canal reservoir which penetrates it deeply and gives rise to a large number of lateral collecting canals, formed by the invagination of the apical plasma membrane. The canals open into a subcuticular cavity forming a common reservoir in which the secretion is accumulated. This reservoir is covered by a modified cuticle formed from the endocuticle and the epicuticle. The endocuticle is composed of a network of fine tubular structures and has many filaments on its surface. The epicuticle is perforated by numerous pores. There is no cuticular duct. The secretion crosses the cuticle in three successive steps. First, it passes through the filaments, then through fine tubular structures of the endocuticle, and finally through the epicuticular pores.  相似文献   

3.
Cuticle segments from the thorax, abdomen, and jumping legs of the house cricket. Acheta domesticus, were examined using histological techniques for light microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and direct examination of frozen-fractured cuticle. The surface of untreated cuticle is covered by a lipid film which obscures fine surface detail. Standard EM preparative procedures, as well as washing the cuticle with ethanol before examination, remove this film exposing previously covered openings to dermal gland ducts and wax canals. An epicuticle, exocuticle, mesocuticle, endocuticle, and a deposition layer were present in all transverse sections of cuticle. Light microscopy showed that the exocuticle and mesocuticle are heavily impregnated with lipids, whereas there is little lipid associated with the endocuticle. Frozen-fractured cuticle clearly shows the ‘plywood’ structure of the meso- and endocuticle, while the exocuticle fractures as if it were a solid sheet. The epicuticle is composed of a dense homogeneous layer, cuticulin, outer epicuticle, and the outer membrane. Superficial wax was detected only in cuticle samples prepared using vinylcyclohexane dioxide as a polar dehydrant. The results were used to construct a comprehensive model of the cuticle of A. domesticus.  相似文献   

4.
The surface and transverse sections of the cephalothorax, abdomen, and walking leg cuticle of the black widow spider, Latrodectus hesperus, were examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Cuticle that was untreated prior to normal EM preparative procedures was compared with cuticle subjected to lipid solvents and/or concentrated alkali. The surface of untreated dorsal cephalothorax cuticle contained droplets and a lipid film that obscured fine surface detail. Immersing the cuticle in chloroform: methanol removed the droplets and lipid film, exposing previously covered openings to dermal gland ducts. An epicuticle, exocuticle, and endocuticle were present in all transverse sections of cuticle as was a complex system of pore and wax canals that connected the epidermis with the cuticle surface. The epicuticle of the walking leg was composed of three sublayers: outer membrane, outer epicuticle, and the dense homogeneous layer. A cuticulin layer was not observed. Lipid solvents did not significantly alter the morphology of any of these layers or the contents of the wax/pore canals.  相似文献   

5.
The moulting cycle and growth of the larval integument of Drosophila melanogaster has been studied by light and electron microscopy. Growth during the first, second and third larval instars is accompanied by 3.0-, 3.4- and 3.7-fold increases in surface area, respectively. Growth in surface area occurs continuously during the larval stages, with no detectable relationship to the moulting cycle. Measurements of the thickness of the cuticular layers show that the endocuticle grows in thickness by apposition and in surface area by stretching. The pre-apolytic epicuticle remains at fairly constant thickness during the increase in surface area, indicating that it grows by intussusception of new components. Post-apolytic epicuticle becomes thinner and increases in surface area by stretching. The epicuticle and pre-ecdysial endocuticle are traversed by filaments, but these do not penetrate the endocuticle secreted after ecdysis. We suggest that the filaments transport breakdown products from the old cuticle inward to the epidermis for reutilization. The growth and deposition of cuticle in two larval growth mutants, lethal (2) giant larvae and Chubby Tubby, involves mechanisms similar to those found in wild-type larvae, but in Chubby Tubby the endocuticle contains inclusions which are ultrastructurally similar to dense epicuticle.  相似文献   

6.
Sclerotized cuticle segments from the thorax, dorsal abdomen, and ventral abdomen of the alpine, weta Hemideina maori (Saussure) (Orthoptera: Stenopelmatidae) were examined by light microscopy and by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. An epicuticle, exocuticle (outer and inner), mesocuticle, endocuticle, and deposition layer are present in transverse sections. The epicuticle is further composed of a cuticulin layer and inner epicuticle, the latter being finely laminated and containing narrow wax canals that terminate below the cuticle surface. Openings to dermal gland ducts are visible on the surface as are large setae and smaller sensory pegs. Frozen fractured cuticle reveals the presence of horizontal ducts or channels that run laterally within the cuticle. The structure of weta cuticle is compared with that of the common house cricket and arthropods in general.  相似文献   

7.
Incorporation of tritiated leucine, tyrosine and glucosamine into the integument of larval Drosophila melanogaster was followed by electron-microscope autoradiography. Tritiated leucine, tyrosine, and glucosamine were incorporated into the endocuticle by apposition, giving rise to a distinct band of label in the endocuticle at a level which depended on the time between labelling and fixation. The labelled amino acids, but not glucosamine, were also detected in the epicuticle and both above and below the distinct labelled band in the endocuticle. The results indicate that the epicuticle grows within the third instar by intussusception of new materials which are transported from the epidermal cells through the endocuticle to the epicuticle. Breakdown of cuticle which was radioactively labelled by feeding larvae tritiated precursors was also followed by autoradiography. The results indicate that the breakdown products from the old cuticle may be reutilized in the synthesis of new cuticle.  相似文献   

8.
The ultrastructure of the nymphal integument in the ixodid tick Hyalomma (Hyalomma) dromedarii is compared for stages of development during and after feeding, and up to the first step of molting, apolysis. The integument comprises a cuticular layer and underlying epidermal cells. The body cuticle, which consists of both sclerotized and non-sclerotized parts, is divided into an outer, thin epicuticle, and an inner, thick, fibrillar procuticle. Pore canals in the procuticle are continuous with wax canals which traverse the epicuticle. As feeding progresses, the parallel, extensible epicuticular folds disappear due to the gut filling with ingested blood. The procuticular zone, however, becomes subdivided into an exocuticle, similar to the previously seen procuticle, and a lamellate endocuticle. Pore canals lose their parallel pattern and appear to have become deformed by stretching of the cuticle. The flat epidermal cells grow asynchronously during feeding; their cytoplasm becomes packed with well-developed rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), while the cell apices project long microvilli extending deep into the procuticle. The RER undergoes ultrastructural changes indicating synthetic activity. Dense material released through the microvilli may serve to lyse the endocuticle and thus cause separation of the cuticle from the epidermis during apolysis. The lysed area, the exuvial cavity, is filled with lysed components which are probably withdrawn by endocytosis into the apical coated vesicles which appear in epidermal cells. Two types of integumental glands, which may participate in wax production, are observed in this study. The ultrastructure of their previously undescribed cuticular ducts is described, in addition to other hypodermal structures including epidermis-muscle attachments and sensory receptors.  相似文献   

9.
A study of the integument of the aquatic mite Arrenurus major Marshall is presented. When the cuticle is examined with the unaided eye and the light microscope, it appears to possess numerous tiny pits. However, scanning electron micrographs of the cuticle reveal that it is a solid surface with topographical sculpturing of the epicuticle, indicating that the “pits” are an internal phenomenon. In cuticle which has been sectioned, areas devoid of cuticular material beneath the thin exocuticle are revealed. These areas are the pits which are goblet-shaped. The integument consists of five major strata. These are from the outside to the inside: (1) a superficial layer with a maximum observed thickness of 725 Å, (2) an epicuticle with a thickness of about 900 Å and composed of at least four sublayers, (3) an exocuticle with a thickness of about 1.5 Å. Fibers of the exocuticle are arranged in a Bouligand pattern and exhibit a regularly occurring discontinuity with a spacing of 200 Å. (4) An endocuticle ranging from 15 to 20 μ in thickness. The endocuticle is characterized by bandings which superficially resemble the lamellae of insects but are not homologous, microfibers which exhibit a preferred orientation, and the presence of the pits; and (5) an epidermis lying beneath the endocuticle and extending into the pits. Pore canals are present only in the exocuticle and have their origin at the apices of the pits. The pore canals contain a central filament, and a plug is present just beneath the epicuticle.  相似文献   

10.
Summary During the pupal stage of Dacus tryoni, the hypodermis of the larva is replaced by an imaginal generation of smaller cells. The hypodermal cells of the tergal glands on the fifth abdominal segment of the adult were examined with the electron microscope; they contain slender, membrane-limited bundles of hollow wax filaments that traverse the cuticle in branched pore canals. Outside the glandular areas, the pore canals are narrower. The cuticle of the adult undergoes its greatest increase in thickness soon after emergence; it becomes sclerotized gradually. No epicuticle was detected with either the light or electron microscopes.Early in adult development, bristles are formed over the general surface of the terga. Most of these are innervated by single, bipolar nerve cells, and have more or less enlarged trichogen cells that appear to secrete wax through pore-plates in the cuticle. The bristles in different regions of the abdomen range in function from pure sensory receptors to pure secretors. The sensory bristles on the tergal glands were examined with the electron microscope.For assistance with the electron microscopy, I thank Mr. Tony Webber and Miss Ann Miller of the Electron Microscopy Unit at Sydney University. — Supported by a C.S.I.R.O. Junior Post-Graduate Studentship.  相似文献   

11.
Filshie BK 《Tissue & cell》1970,2(3):479-498
The cuticle of Lucilia is composed of an untanned endocuticle and a complex epicuticle of four layers, superficial layer, outer epicuticle, cuticulin and dense layer. The outer epicuticle and attached epicuticular filaments are resistant to acid hydrolysis. During deposition of the cuticle of each larval instar, the cuticulin and dense layers are formed first, followed by the outer epicuticle, which appears to be laid down by secretions from the epidermis passing through the cuticulin via epicuticular filaments. The outer epicuticle is found in the position normally occupied by the wax layer of other insect species.  相似文献   

12.
Larvae of Lucilia cuprina, fed toxic levels of α-methyl DOPA (or other DOPA decarboxylase inhibitors) during the first or second instar, die at the completion of the next moult, soon after exposing their new cuticles. In electron micrographs of newly synthesised cuticle from these treated larvae, the ultrastructure of the lipid-rich outer epicuticle layer appears to be abnormal. This newly formed cuticle of the treated larvae is apparently defective in its role as a water permeability barrier (compared with that of normal larvae), since it permits the free movement of water in both directions. Thus, treated larvae die most probably as a direct result of dehydration. Larvae fed toxic levels of α-methyl DOPA can be rescued from death by simultaneously adding N-acetyldopamine (the cuticular sclerotizing agent) to the food. The rescued larvae are apparently normal in all respects. This suggests that sclerotization is required for the formation of a normal outer epicuticle. Diflubenzuron, which is known to inhibit chitin deposition in the cuticles of a number of different species of insect, also apparently affects chitin deposition in the larval cuticle of L. cuprina. Thus, in electron micrographs of cuticle from larvae fed toxic levels of diflubenzuron the ultrastructure of the chitin-containing endocuticle layer appears to be abnormal.  相似文献   

13.
Zhang YF  Xie YP  Xue JL  Fu XH  Liu WM 《动物学研究》2012,33(3):e13-e17
Using scanning electron microscopy and optical microscopy,we studied the structure of the integument and wax glands of the mealybug,Phenacoccus fraxinus Tang(Hemiptera:Coccoidea:Pseudococcidae).We observed the ultrastructure of four wax pores including trilocular,quinquelocular,and multilocular pores as well as tubular ducts,recording characteristics of their structure,size and distribution.We found that that the integument of the mealybug consists of three main layers-the procuticle,epidermis and basement membrane-and four sub-layers of the procuticle-the epicuticle,exocuticle,endocuticle and formation zone.The waxsecreting gland cells were closely arranged in epidermis.All of them were complex and composed of one central cell and two or more lateral cells.These complex cells possess a large common reservoir for collection and storage.Synthesized by the glandular cells,the wax is excreted outside integument through canals.  相似文献   

14.
The structure, histochemistry, and possible functional properties of the cuticle in two parasitic copepods Pennella elegans Gnanamuthu and Caligus savala Gnanamuthu have been studied: the former is partially embedded in the host while the latter is an ectoparasite capable of free swimming.In Pennella elegans the cuticle of the embedded anterior region of the body is soft, colourless, and lacks an outer epicuticle while that of the posterior exposed part is pigmented and hard. Conspicuous in the cuticle of the ventral region of the head are pore canals which, though not chitinized, are functional even in the intermoult stage: these canals may be involved in the transport of nutrient materials from the host. The horns, which serve to fix the parasite firmly in the host tissues, are covered by cuticle in which the epicuticle and outer layers of the procuticle are hardened by formation of disulphide linkages. The cuticle of the neck region is not hardened and the procuticle in this region shows transverse regions of dense and light zones probably related to the coiling of the neck during penetration. The epicuticle is two layered in the cuticle of the exposed posterior region, the inner epicuticle and outer region of the procuticle being partially hardened by phenolic tanning so confer rigidity and resistance. The cuticle of the plumes is soft and devoid of an outer lipid epicuticle and so possibly adapted for a respiratory function.In Caligus savala, the epicuticle is two layered, and the procuticle has pigmented, calcified, and uncalcified layers. The cuticle is hardened by phenolic tanning as well as by calcification thus recalling the cuticular organization of decapod crustaceans.  相似文献   

15.
In all the cuticles studied waterproofing is effected by extracuticular material, a mixture of sclerotin precursors and lipids, exuded from the tubular filaments of the pore canals. In Rhodnius larval abdomen it is a layer of thickness similar to the outer epicuticle, believed to be composed of 'sclerotin' and wax, in Schistocerca larval sternal cuticle and in Carausius sternal cuticle it is similar. In Tenebrio adult sternal cuticle of the abdomen, in both the extracuticular exudation and the contents of the distal endings of the tubular filaments, the wax component is obscured by hard 'sclerotin'. In Manduca larva a very thin layer of 'sclerotin' and wax is covered by an irregular wax layer, average 0.75 micron, twice the thickness of the inner epicuticle. In Periplaneta and Blattella the abdominal cuticle is covered by a soft waxy layer, often about 1 micron thick, which is mixed with argentaffin material. Below this is a very thin waterproof layer of wax and 'sclerotin' continuous with the contents of the tubular filaments, which is readily removed by adsorptive dusts. In Apis adult abdominal terga free wax plus sclerotin precursors form a thin layer which is known to be removed by adsorptive dusts. In Calliphora larva there is a very thin layer of the usual mixed wax and sclerotin and below this a thick (0.5 micron) layer, lipid staining and strongly osmiophil, likewise extracuticular and exuded from the epicuticular channels. This material (which is often called 'outer epicuticle') has the same staining and resistance properties as the true outer epicuticle on which it rests. In the abdomen of Calliphora adult the waterproofing wax-sclerotin mixture forms a thin layer over the entire cuticle including the surface of the microtrichia. There is also a thin detachable layer of free wax on the surface.  相似文献   

16.
Shatrov AB 《Tsitologiia》2000,42(3):219-227
The ultrastructural organization of hypodermis and the process of cuticle deposition is described for the pharate larvae of a trombiculid mite, Leptotrombidium orientale, being under the egg-shell and prelarval covering. The thin single-layered hypodermis consists of flattened epithelial cells containing oval or stretched nuclei and smooth basal plasma membrane. The apical membrane forms short scarce microvilli participating in the cuticle deposition. First of all, upper layers of the epicuticle, such as cuticulin lamella, wax and cement layers, are formed above the microvilli with plasma membrane plaques. Cuticulin layer is seen smooth at the early steps of this process. Very soon, however, epicuticle starts to be curved and forms particular high and tightly packed ridges, whereas the surface of hypodermal cells remains flat. Then a thick layer of the protein epicuticle is deposited due to secretory activity of hypodermal cells. Nearly simultaneously the thick lamellar procuticle starts to form through the deposition of their microfibrils at the tips of microvilli of the apical plasma membrane. Procuticle, as such, remains flat, is situated beneath the epicuticular ridges and contains curved pore canals. Cup-like pores in the epicuticle provide augmentation of the protein epicuticle mass due to secretion of particular substances by cells and to their transportation through the pore canals towards these epicuticular pores. The very beginning of the larval cuticle formation apparently indicates the starting point of the larval stage in ontogenesis, even though it remains for some time enveloped by the prelarval covering or sometimes by the egg-shell. When all the processes of formation are over, hungry larvae with a fully formed cuticle are actively hatched from two splitted halves of prelarval covering.  相似文献   

17.
The surface and transverse sections of the epicuticle of the desert scorpion, Hadrurus arizonensis, were examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy, respectively. Sclerite cuticle that was untreated prior to normal EM preparative procedures was compared to cuticle subjected to lipid solvents, high temperature, and concentrated alkali. Surface morphology of untreated intersegmental cuticle was also examined. The epicuticle is composed of four sublayers: outer membrane, outer epicuticle, cuticulin, and the dense homogeneous layer. Lipid solvents did not significantly alter the morphology of any of these layers or the contents of the wax canals that penetrate the cuticulin layer even though the solvents effectively remove lipids from the epicuticle for chemical analysis. The surface of the sclerite cuticle contains amorphous particles, crystalline projections, and scattered openings to dermal gland ducts. Perforations that correspond to the opening of wax canals were faintly visible after extraction of surface waxes and clearly visible after KOH treatment. No openings to dermal gland ducts or wax canals were observed in untreated intersegmental cuticle. However, wax canals are likely obscured by surface waxes similar to those present in sclerite cuticle.  相似文献   

18.
The sclerotized cuticle of adult Tenebrio shows (1) an exocuticle composed of rotating lamellate layers and of columns of cuticular material, the fibres of which run perpendicularly through the lamellae, (2) an endocuticle composed of layers with preferred orientation. In the exocuticle, the pore canals are numerous and run along the columns; they do not rotate with the lamellate layers. They show several filaments some of which leave the canals and form a dense intracuticular network. In the last layers of exocuticle, the pericolumnar canals fuse and form large endocuticular canals which rotate in phase with the cuticular fibres. The formation of columns and canals is in relation with cellular expansions which penetrate into the cuticle during cuticle deposition. Exocuticular columns seem characteristic of highly sclerotized cuticles and the intracuticular filaments may have a role in the transport of sclerotisation precursors.  相似文献   

19.
The ultrastructure and formation of the cuticle of a myodocopan ostracod, Euphilomedes japonica, are investigated utilizing scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The outer lamella cuticle consists of four layers; epicuticle, exocuticle, endocuticle, and membranous layer like in the cuticle of other arthropods. The exocuticle and endocuticle are well-calcified and the organic matrix develops within the both cuticles. The outermost layer of new cuticle (epicuticle) is secreted first and the inner layers (exocuticle, endocuticle and membranous layer) are added proximally in the pre-, and postmoult stages. The calcification takes place in the whole area of carapace at the same time together with the synthesis of organic matrix within the endocuticle. This study demonstrates that the ultrastructure and formation of the cuticle in myodocopans are different from those in podocopans, and that the myodocopan carapaces have achieved a structural diversity for adaptation to different lifestyles.  相似文献   

20.
The cuticle of the cephalobaenid pentastomid Reighardia sternae is described at various stages of the moult-intermoult cycle. The intermoult cuticle comprises four layers: an outer epicuticle; an underlying dense layer, the protein epicuticle; a fibrillar endocuticle; and a denser subcuticle. The overall similarity between the structure and composition of these layers and those of insects is discussed. However, the orientation of the chitin-protein fibres in the endocuticle does not show the rotating structure characteristic of many arthropod species, but this does appear in the sclerotized hooks. It is suggested that this comparatively loose, poorly oriented endocuticular structure produces a highly extensible cuticle which is precisely adapted to the specialized, endoparasitic habit of this species. Events at ecdysis, particularly the secretion of moulting fluid and the deposition of cuticulin, follow the insect pattern precisely. The phyletic significance of these observations is discussed.  相似文献   

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