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1.
The myocardium of the sinus venosus of the dogfish ( Scyliorhinus canicula ) is located between a thick subepicardial collagen-rich layer and a subendocardial network of nerve fibres and ganglion cells. The sinoatrial valve consists of two transversal folds of the cardiac wall which are separated by connective tissue, except in their free margins.
The myocardium of the sinus venosus and the sinusal face of the sinoatrial valve is arranged in bundles which are surrounded by a 40 nm-thick basal lamina. The myocardial cells measure about 7-9 μm in diameter at the nuclear level. Nerve terminals are frequent in the centre of the bundles. Most of the sinusal myocardiocytes have a scarce amount of myofibrils which are randomly orientated. The sarcoplasmic reticulum is relatively well developed and consists of peripheral couplings, subsarcolemmal vesicles, circular and longitudinal tubules. The scarce intercalated discs show only fasciae adhaerentes . Gap junctions, desmosomes or specific granules are not observed in the sinusal myocardiocytes of the dogfish. In contrast, the atrial myocardiocytes are smaller, about 5-6 μm in diameter at the nuclear level. The cytoplasm is denser and the myofibrils are abundant and orientated in parallel directions. Specific granules are present. although scarce. Subsarcolemmal vesicles are less frequent, while the atrial intercalated discs are larger and more abundant than those of the sinus venosus. Neural elements are scarce in the atrium.
The differences observed between sinus venosus and atrium might be related to the morphological criteria to distinguish between the nodal tissue and the working myocardiocytes of higher vertebrates. On the other hand, we think that the connective tissue placed between sinus venom and atrium means that the contraction impulse generated in the sinus venosus must reach the atrium through the free margin of the valve. It might play a role in the sinoatrial valve function.  相似文献   

2.
The sinus venosus of the elasmobranch heart is characterized by the presence of large bundles of unmyelinated nerve fibres that bulge into the cardiac lumen, below the endocardium. In the dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicula), these fibres contain numerous dense-core membrane-bounded granules of about 200 nm in diameter. Most intramural ganglion cells of the sinus venosus also show densely packed granules similar to those found in the subendocardial fibres. We have observed strong substance-P-like immunoreactivity in the large fibre bundles and in the perikarya of the ganglion cells. Preabsorption of the antisera with fragment 7–11 of substance P has shown that the antisera recognize the tachykinin canonic sequence. Our findings suggest that an undetermined tachykinin is secreted in the elasmobranch heart, and that it is probably released into the blood stream in the context of a little-known neuroendocrine system.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The wall of the sinus venosus in an elasmobranchian species, Chimaera monstrosa L. is described.Endocardial cells contain numerous large vacuoles, as well as a number of membrane-bounded, moderately electron dense bodies (MDB). Myocardial cells lie closely packed into bundles surrounded by a basal lamina of about 20 nm thickness, and by large amounts of collagen fibres. These cells are connected by desmosomes of 1–2 µm length and with an intermembranous gap of 10–20 nm. Myocardial cells poor in myofibrils are intermingled with cells containing a well developed contractile material. Atrial specific granules are scarce. Vesiculated nerve processes occur at a distance of about 20 nm from the myocardial sarcolemma. Myocardial cells of the sino-atrial junction appear ultrastructurally similar to those located elsewhere in the sinus venosus. Epicardial cells contain large vacuoles, and have fibrecoated protrusions extending into the pericardial space.The possibility of pacemaker activity in the elasmobranchian sinus venosus is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The concentrations of catecholamines in the heart chambers of elasmobranchs were measured by the fluorimetric method of Bertler et al. (1958). Noradrenaline (NA) can be detected in all the chambers, but the sinus venosus is by far the richest in NA. This can either be due to the presence of storage sites for this amine in the sinus wall, or to a transport of amine to the sinus venosus from the anterior chromaffin bodies. The sinus wall contains large numbers of "granule containing cells" and axon-like processes, both with numerous dense-core vesicles of about 1800 A diameter. The dense-core vesicles contain a uranophilic matrix indicating the presence of protein, phospholipids and/or nucleic acid. The reactions failed to demonstrate amine, which may be due to a loss of amine by diffusion, to a relatively low intravesicular amine concentration, or, to the absence of amines in these granule-containing cells and processes. Heavy accumulations of granule-containing processes occur in the subendothelial area. The endothelium contains fenestrae and pores through which granule-containing fibres protrude into the venous cavity. Granule-containing cells are innervated by presumed cholinergic nerve endings. It is suggested that the granule-containing cells and fibres belong to the neurosecretory system with a cholinergic input, releasing the contents of the dense-core vesicles into the blood stream at the level of the venous cavity.  相似文献   

5.
Ramos C 《Tissue & cell》2004,36(6):399-407
The sinus venosus of fish is the most caudal chamber of the heart. It is often reduced in teleosts but well developed in elasmobranchs. The sinus venosus of the dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicula) is vital, since it harbours key elements such as a little known neuroendocrine system and the nodal tissue. However, the study of its structure is still incomplete. We examined the endocardium, epicardium and subepicardium of the sinus venosus in mature dogfishes. The wall is 100-250 microm thick and comprises three main layers. Large bundles of myocardial cells occupy the middle layer. The endothelial ensheathing is composed of thin endocardial cells with prominent nuclei towards the lumen, whose cytoplasm contains numerous dense bodies and moderately dense bodies, 150-800 nm in diameter and large vacuoles. The possible functions of these organelles are discussed. The outermost layer is made of a robust sheet of cuboidal epicardial cells separated from the subepicardium by a conspicuous basal lamina. Numerous microvilli towards the pericardial cavity and elliptical vesicles are located in the apex of epicardial cells. A thick layer richly endowed with dense bundles of collagen fibres forms the subepicardial space. This structure should be contrasted with the venous return mechanism of elasmobranchs.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Previous studies have demonstrated that substance P-(SP) and calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivities (CGRP-LI) coexist in sensory nerve fibres in the guinea-pig carotid body and carotid sinus. In the present study the ultrastructure of these nerve fibres was investigated by means of single-and double-labelling immunocytochemistry. In both, carotid body and carotid sinus immunoreactive fibres were unmyelinated axons of small dianeter (0.12–0.56 m). At the subcellular level, SP-and CGRP-LI were colocalized in intra-axonal dense core vesicles, suggesting corelease and simultaneous action of these two compounds. SP/CGRP-LI nerve fibres within the carotid body were mainly found in the interparenchymal connective tissue, but also occurred in relationship to blood vesslesl and nests of glomus cells. Neither in the carotid body not in the carotid sinus, SP/CGRP-LI axons corresponded to the large terminals which are generally considered to represent the main chemoreceptor and baroreceptor endings, respectively. Thus, SP/CGRP-LI fibres either belong to the chemo-and baroreceptors of the C-fibre class or constitute a fibre population not directly involved in conduction of baro-and chemoreflexes.This study was supported by the DFG, grant He 919/6-2  相似文献   

7.
Helle  K. B.  Miralto  A.  Pihl  K. E.  Tota  B. 《Cell and tissue research》1983,231(2):399-414
Summary The general and ultrastructural organization of the heart of the elasmobranch, Scyllium stellare, was studied in normal and in anoxic animals. The rich coronary supply was revealed three-dimensionally by the use of corrosion casts, showing a thebesian system of coronary arterioles and capillaries in the thin, outer compact layer as well as in the predominant, inner spongy layer of trabeculae.Only the sinus venosus received a neuronal input of large bundles of granule-containing axons terminating at fenestrated regions of the endocardium and suggesting a neurohormonal function.A simple, tubular sarcoplasmic reticulum with flattened junctional cisternae was present in myocardial cells of 1–5 m diameter, which contained one or two bundles of myofibrils. The latter were closely apposed to the inner aspect of the plasmalemma. Mitochondria were located centrally in the cells, which were joined by unfolded desmosomes involving Z-band material.Long periods of anoxia were tolerated without loss of heart function, but at the expense of cytoplasmic glycogen. Lipid granules were abundant in all layers and chambers, notably in animals prepared in the summer. The lipid granules displayed a marked increase in electron density when the heart was incubated in a buffered oxalate solution prior to fixation. A glycogen-sparing effect of the lipids during anoxia was observed.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The ontogenesis of small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells and the adrenergic nerve plexus is described in stretch preparations of the rabbit portal vein. On the 25 to 26th days of gestation there was a predominance of SIF cells (8 to 30 m in diameter), but a few nerve fibres in bundles were also present. Each portal vein preparation contained 6 to 9 groups of cells. The distribution and number of SIF cells and nerve bundles remained constant until the 31st day of gestation at which stage the number of SIF cells had decreased, while the density of the nerve plexus had increased approximately 4-fold. The adult portal vein exhibited a dense adrenergic plexus, but SIF cells were absent from nine out of ten preparations.  相似文献   

9.
Ultrastructure of arterioles in the cat brain   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary A total of 110 arterioles were examined in the brains of cats; different sites were studied including the cortex, putamen, pons and crus cerebri. No internal elastic laminae were seen in the subendothelial space, although occasional fragments of elastic material were present in the larger arterioles. The media was composed of one, two or three layers of smooth muscle cells which interlocked in such a way that the vessel wall thickness was constant. Numerous tight junctions were seen between adjacent smooth muscle cells and between the endothelium and smooth muscle cells. Apart from the usual cell organelles, the smooth muscle cells of arterioles had numerous dense patches on the cell surface. The structure of the adventitia varied according to the diameter of the vessel and the site in the brain; it contained adventitial cells, bundles of collagen fibres and nerve fibres. Innervation of arterioles was more constant in the brain stem than in the cortex. Metarterioles had less specialised, atypical smooth muscle cells, a discontinuous media and numerous, extensive myoendothelial tight junctions; they were not innervated by nerve fibres. The diameter of metarterioles was less than 10 m whereas that of arterioles was 10–45 m. The possible functional aspects of arteriolar innervation are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The distribution of FMRFamide-like immunoreactive neurons in the nervous system of the slug Limax maximus was studied using immunohistochemical methods. Approximately one thousand FMRFamide-like immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the central nervous system. Ranging between 15 m and 200 m in diameter, they were found in all 11 ganglia of the central nervous system. FMRFamide-like immunoreactive cell bodies were also found at peripheral locations on buccal nerve roots. FMRFamide-like immunoreactive nerve fibres were present in peripheral nerve roots and were distributed extensively throughout the neuropil and cell body regions of the central ganglia. They were also present in the connective tissue of the perineurium, forming an extensive network of varicose fibres. The large number, extensive distribution and great range in size of FMRFamide-like immunoreactive cell bodies and the wide distribution of immunoreactive fibres suggest that FMRFamide-like peptides might serve several different functions in the nervous system of the slug.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The proximal truncus arteriosus of the lizard Trachydosaurus rugosus was studied with light-, fluorescence and electron-microscopical techniques. Three vessels comprised the truncus: the pulmonary, left aortic, and caroticoaortic arteries. Right and left truncal nerves, each derived from the ipsilateral vagus nerve, innervated the truncus, particularly its proximal 3 mm.Ultrastructurally, the nerves had a variety of appearances: some were clearly adrenergic, c-type or p-type. A number of profiles contained large numbers of mitochondria and were classified as sensory. Some profiles defied exact classification, having characteristics common to two different types of profile.Within the outer medial layers, profiles up to 7 m in diameter were found. These contained large numbers of mitochondria, myelin bodies and structures intermediate between the two. In addition, the profiles contained large amounts of glycogen and small numbers of vesicles. These nerve fibres were classified as baroreceptors, since they closely resemble carotid sinus and aortic arch baroreceptors in mammals.Large numbers of chromaffin cells were found, particularly in the common wall of the pulmonary and left aortic arteries. Many of these cells emitted a long tapering process, which sometimes entered a nearby nerve bundle. Sensory, p-type and c-type profiles, but not adrenergic profiles, made extensive close contacts with chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

12.
E Fehér  K Csányi  J Vajda 《Acta anatomica》1979,103(1):109-118
The nerve elements in the urinary bladder of the cat were studied by electron microscopy. According to their ultrastructure, nerve cell somata can be classified into three types: the large cells with a cytoplasm rich in organelles, several processes and numerous synaptic contacts on their surface; the cytoplasm contained 80- 120-nm granulated vesicles. The second type is poor in cytoplasmic organelles and has very few processes and virtually no synaptic contacts on the soma. The third type contains numerous large 160- to 220-nm 'neurosecretory' vesicles in the cytoplasm. According to the morphology of the vesicle population, four types of nerve processes could be distinguished: Type a, with a dominant population of small (40-60 nm) agranular vesicles. These are thought to be sacral parasympathetic fibres. Type b, with small (40-60 nm) granular vesicles, which may be the noradrenergic sympathetic fibres. Type c, with 80- to 120-nm granulated vesicles, probably of local origin. Typed d, with large 160- to 220-nm 'neurosecretory' vesicles also of local origin. Different types of nerve fibres are converging on the local nerve cells. This suggests that the local circuits can play an important role in coordinating the function of the bladder. Therefore, ganglia may be considered as an elementary functional unit.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The presence of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the skin of pig snout and human fingertip was investigated using immunohistochemical techniques. CGRP immunoreactivity was found in Merkel cells and nerve fibres of both species. In pig snout skin, Merkel cells containing CGRP were seen forming clusters at the tips of rete ridge epidermis and in the external root sheath of sinus hair follicles (vibrissae). Human Merkel cells immunostained for CGRP were found isolated or forming small groups in the basal layer of glandular epidermal ridges. In all cases, immunoreactivity was more intense on the side of the Merkel cell facing the associated nerve terminal (which was never positive for CGRP). This part of the Merkel cell has the greatest density of dense-cored granules, suggesting that CGRP must be stored in these granules. Nerve, bundles containing CGRP-immunoreactive fibres were found at dermal and hypodermal level, and blood vessels were often surrounded by CGRP nerve fibres. In pig snout skin some nerve fibres containing CGRP penetrated the epidermis and terminated as free endings, and in the human fingertip a small number of CGRP-immunoreactive nerve fibres were seen in Meissner's corpuscles.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The organization of collagen fibrils in the rat sciatic nerve was studied by scanning electron microscopy after digestion of cellular elements by sodium hydroxide treatment, and by conventional transmission electron microscopy. The epineurium consisted mainly of thick bundles of collagen fibrils measuring about 10–20 m in width; they were wavy and ran slightly obliquely to the nerve axis. Between these collagen bundles, a very coarse meshwork of randomly oriented collagen fibrils was present. In the perineurium, collagen fibrils occupied the interspaces between the concentrically arranged perineurial cells; in each interspace, they formed a sheet of characteristic lacework elaborately interwoven by thin (about 3 m or less in width) bundles of collagen fibrils. In the subperineurial region, there was a distinct sheet of densely woven collagen fibrils between the perineurium and underlying endoneurial fibroblasts. In the endoneurium, collagen fibrils surrounded individual nerve fibers in two layers as scaffolds: the inner layer was made up of a delicate meshwork of very fine collagen fibrils, and the outer one consisted of longitudinally oriented bundles of about 1–3 m in width. The collagen fibril arrangement described above may protect the nerve fibers against external forces.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The relationship between bombesin-like immunoreactive (bombesin-LI) nerve fibres and gastrin-LI G-cells was examined in gastric antral mucosa from guineapig, rat, dog and man using a double-labelling fluorescence immunohistochemical technique. The greatest density of bombesin-LI nerve fibres was found within the basal mucosa in all species and the density of innervation decreased towards the luminal surface. Most G-cells were in a band occupying approximately the middle third of the mucosa. The proportion of G-cells found within a distance of 2 m from bombesin-LI nerve fibres was low in all species (6% in the guinea-pig, 22% in the rat, 14% in the dog, and 9% in the human). It is proposed that the neuropeptide released from bombesin-LI antral mucosal nerve fibres traverses distances of greater than several m to reach the target G-cells. This may be achieved by passage through the mucosal microcirculation.  相似文献   

16.
The presence of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the skin of pig snout and human fingertip was investigated using immunohistochemical techniques. CGRP immunoreactivity was found in Merkel cells and nerve fibres of both species. In pig snout skin, Merkel cells containing CGRP were seen forming clusters at the tips of rete ridge epidermis and in the external root sheath of sinus hair follicles (vibrissae). Human Merkel cells immunostained for CGRP were found isolated or forming small groups in the basal layer of glandular epidermal ridges. In all cases, immunoreactivity was more intense on the side of the Merkel cell facing the associated nerve terminal (which was never positive for CGRP). This part of the Merkel cell has the greatest density of dense-cored granules, suggesting that CGRP must be stored in these granules. Nerve bundles containing CGRP-immunoreactive fibres were found at dermal and hypodermal level, and blood vessels were often surrounded by CGRP nerve fibres. In pig snout skin some nerve fibres containing CGRP penetrated the epidermis and terminated as free endings, and in the human fingertip a small number of CGRP-immunoreactive nerve fibres were seen in Meissner's corpuscles.  相似文献   

17.
W Kummer  A Fischer  C Heym 《Histochemistry》1989,92(5):433-439
Previous studies have demonstrated that substance P- (SP) and calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivities (CGRP-LI) coexist in sensory nerve fibres in the guinea-pig carotid body and carotid sinus. In the present study the ultrastructure of these nerve fibres was investigated by means of single- and double-labelling immunocytochemistry. In both, carotid body and carotid sinus immunoreactive fibres were unmyelinated axons of small diameter (0.12-0.56 microns). At the subcellular level, SP- and CGRP-LI were colocalized in intra-axonal dense core vesicles, suggesting corelease and simultaneous action of these two compounds. SP/CGRP-LI nerve fibres within the carotid body were mainly found in the interparenchymal connective tissue, but also occurred in relationship to blood vessels and nests of glomus cells. Neither in the carotid body not in the carotid sinus, SP/CGRP-LI axons corresponded to the large terminals which are generally considered to represent the main chemoreceptor and baroreceptor endings, respectively. Thus, SP/CGRP-LI fibres either belong to the chemo- and baroreceptors of the C-fibre class or constitute a fibre population not directly involved in conduction of baro- and chemoreflexes.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The cells of the sinuatrial ring bundle are smaller than the ordinary myocardial cells; they have a regular outline and a large content of myofibrils exhibiting distinct H-bands and M-lines. Rudimentary T-tubules are found. The cells are connected by frequent nexus junctions, desmosomes and regions of interfibrillar contact, both on the well developed intercalated discs and at the periphery of the cells.The cells in the cauda of the sinus node, which extends alongside the crista terminalis together with the right branch of the sinuatrial ring bundle, are irregularly outlined and have a highly variable diameter (1–10 m). They occur in clusters of closely packed cells. The content of myofibrils is sparse and the fibrils exhibit no M-lines and only weak H-bands. No T-tubules are found. The cells are not connected by intercalated discs and no nexus junctions are found.Both tissues contain unmyelinated nerves and nerve fibres. Varicosities with mitochondria and vesicles are found in close apposition to the muscle cells.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Electronmicrographic montages of the olfactory tract at two levels in each of two fish (Carassius carassius L.) were constructed and fibre diameters measured using a Zeiss TGZ 3 particle size analyzer. Medial and lateral tract divisions, rhinocele and dorsal tela were identified. Ciliated ependymal cells line the rhinocele. Meninges form the outer covering of both tract divisions and the tela roofing the central canal.The lateral tract consists of 10–14 fasciculi in which myelinated nerve fibres are prominent. These fibres range in diameter between 0.2 and 1.8 (mean 0.7 ) consistent with conduction velocities averaging 0.6 m/sec recorded in the carp lateral olfactory tract.The medial division of the olfactory tract contains two larger fasciculi within which are numerous fine unmyelinated nerve fibres (mean diameter 0.17 ) arranged in bundles partly enveloped by glial cell processes. Myelinated nerve fibres are unevenly distributed within both fasciculi and have mean diameters of 0.6 .An interesting observation is the consistent presence of synapses within the largest bundle of the medial tract at all levels.Supported by Grant 5 Ro5 TW00154-03 from the National Institutes of Health, United States Public Health Service.The authors are indebted to the Fisheries and Wildlife Department who generously provided the fish from Snob's Creek Fish Hatchery, and gratefully acknowledge the technical assistance of Mr. T. Armitage, Mr. J. Simmons and Miss D. Harrison.  相似文献   

20.
Summary A study has been made of catecholamine stores that may be involved in cardiac regulation in the shark Heterodontus portusjacksoni. The anatomy of the anterior chromaffin bodies associated with the sympathetic chain is described. A fluoresent histochemical study shows that the chromaffin cells contain a monoamine, probably noradrenaline. The chromaffin cells have a fine structure comparable to that of chromaffin cells in other vertebrates. The heart is devoid of histochemically-demonstrable chromaffin cells or adrenergic nerve fibres, with the exception of a very sparse adrenergic innervation of the sinus venosus. It is argued that adrenergic control of the heart in Heterodontus might occur via amines released from the anterior chromaffin masses into the blood in the posterior cardinal sinus, which is then aspirated directly into the heart.  相似文献   

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