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1.
Differentiation and localization of keratin in the epidermis during embryonic development and up to 3 months posthatching in the Australian water python, Liasis fuscus, was studied by ultrastructural and immunocytochemical methods. Scales arise from dome-like folds in the skin that produce tightly imbricating scales. The dermis of these scales is completely differentiated before any epidermal differentiation begins, with a loose dermis made of mesenchymal cells beneath the differentiating outer scale surface. At this stage (33) the embryo is still unpigmented and two layers of suprabasal cells contain abundant glycogen. At Stage 34 (beginning of pigmentation) the first layers of cells beneath the bilayered periderm (presumptive clear and oberhautchen layers) have not yet formed a shedding complex, within which prehatching shedding takes place. At Stage 35 the shedding complex, consisting of the clear and oberhautchen layers, is discernible. The clear layer contains a fine fibrous network that faces the underlying oberhautchen, where the spinulae initially contain a core of fibrous material and small beta-keratin packets. Differentiation continues at Stage 36 when the beta-layer forms and beta-keratin packets are deposited both on the fibrous core of the oberhautchen and within beta-cells. Mesos cells are produced from the germinal layer but remain undifferentiated. At Stage 37, before hatching, the beta-layer is compact, the mesos layer contains mesos granules, and cells of the alpha-layer are present but are not yet keratinized. They are still only partially differentiated a few hours after hatching, when a new shedding complex is forming underneath. Using antibodies against chick scale beta-keratin resolved at high magnification with immunofluorescent or immunogold conjugates, we offer the first molecular confirmation that in snakes only the oberhautchen component of the shedding complex and the underlying beta cells contain beta-keratin. Initially, there is little immunoreactivity in the small beta-packets of the oberhautchen, but it increases after fusion with the underlying cells to produce the syncytial beta layer. The beta-keratin packets coalesce with the tonofilaments, including those attached to desmosomes, which rapidly disappear in both oberhautchen and beta-cells as differentiation progresses. The labeling is low to absent in forming mesos-cells beneath the beta-layer. This study further supports the hypothesis that the shedding complex in lepidosaurian reptiles evolved after there was a segregation between alpha-keratogenic cells from beta-keratogenic cells during epidermal renewal.  相似文献   

2.
During epidermal differentiation in mammals, keratins and keratin-associated matrix proteins rich in histidine are synthesized to produce a corneous layer. Little is known about interkeratin proteins in nonmammalian vertebrates, especially in reptiles. Using ultrastructural autoradiography after injection of tritiated proline or histidine, the cytological process of synthesis of beta-keratin and interkeratin material was studied during differentiation of the epidermis of lizards. Proline is mainly incorporated in newly synthesized beta-keratin in beta-cells, and less in oberhautchen cells. Labeling is mainly seen among ribosomes within 30 min postinjection and appears in beta-keratin packets or long filaments 1-3 h later. Beta-keratin appears as an electron-pale matrix material that completely replaces alpha-keratin filaments in cells of the beta-layer. Tritiated histidine is mainly incorporated into keratohyalin-like granules of the clear layer, in dense keratin bundles of the oberhautchen layer, and also in dense keratin filaments of the alpha and lacunar layer. The detailed ultrastructural study shows that histidine-labeling is localized over a dense amorphous material associated with keratin filaments or in keratohyalin-like granules. Large keratohyalin-like granules take up labeled material at 5-22 h postinjection of tritiated histidine. This suggests that histidine is utilized for the synthesis of keratins and keratin-associated matrix material in alpha-keratinizing cells and in oberhautchen cells. As oberhautchen cells fuse with subjacent beta-cells to form a syncytium, two changes occur : incorporation of tritiated histidine, but uptake of proline increases. The incorporation of tritiated histidine in oberhautchen cells lowers after merging with cells of the beta-layer, whereas instead proline uptake increases. In beta-cells histidine-labeling is lower and randomly distributed over the cytoplasm and beta-keratin filaments. Thus, change in histidine uptake somehow indicates the transition from alpha- to beta-keratogenesis. This study indicates that a functional stratum corneum in the epidermis of amniotes originates only after the association of matrix and corneous cell envelope proteins with the original keratin scaffold of keratinocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Alibardi L 《Tissue & cell》2000,32(2):153-162
In the epidermis of lizards, alpha- and beta-keratins are sequentially produced during a shedding cycle. Using pre- and post-embedding immunocytochemistry this study shows the ultrastructural distribution of 3 alpha-keratin antibodies (AE1, AE2, AE3) in the renewing epidermis and in the shedding complex of the regenerating tail of the lizard Podarcis muralis. The AE1 antibody that recognizes acidic low MW keratins is confined to tonofilament bundles in basal and suprabasal cells but is not present in keratinizing beta- and alpha-cells. The AE2 antibody that recognises higher MW keratins weakly stains pre-keratinized cells and intensely keratinized alpha-layers. A weak labeling is present in small electrondense areas within the beta-layer. The AE3 antibody, that recognizes low and high MW basic keratins, immunolabels tonofilament bundles in all epidermal layers but intensely the alpha-keratinizing and keratinized layers (mesos, alpha-, lacunar and clear). Keratohyalin-like granules, present in the clear cells of the shedding layer, are negative to these antibodies so that the cornified clear layer contains keratins mixed with non-keratin material. The AE3 antibody shows that the mature beta-layer and the spinulated folds of the oberhautchen are labeled only in small dense areas among the prevalent electron-pale beta-keratin material. Therefore, some alpha-keratin is still present in the beta-layer, and supports the idea that alpha-keratins (basic) function as scaffold for beta-keratin deposition.  相似文献   

4.
Little is known of the lipid content of beta-keratin-producing cells such as those of feathers, scutate scales, and beak. The sequence of epidermal layers in some apteria and in interfollicular epidermis in the zebrafinch embryo (Taeniopygia guttata castanotis) was studied. Also, the production of beta-keratin in natal down feathers and beak was ultrastructurally analyzed in embryos from 3-4 to 17-18 days postdeposition, before hatching. Two layers of periderm initially cover the embryo, but there are eventually 6-8 over the epidermis of the beak. In the beak and sheath cells of feathers, peridermal granules are numerous at 12-14 days postdeposition but they are less frequent in apteria. These granules swell and disappear during sheath or peridermal degeneration at 15-17 days postdeposition. A thin beta-keratin layer forms under the periderm among feather germs of pterylous areas but is discontinuous or disappears in apteria. In differentiating cells of barbs, barbules, and calamus cells of natal down, electron-dense beta-keratin filaments form bundles oriented along the main axis of these cells. Cells of the pulp epidermis and collar, at the base of the follicle, contain lipids and bundles of alpha-keratin filaments. Degenerating pulp cells show vacuolization and nuclear pycnosis. During beta-keratin packing, keratin bundles turn electron-pale, perhaps due to the addition of lipids to produce the final, homogenous beta-keratin matrix. In contrast to the situation in feathers, in the cells of beak beta-keratin packets are irregularly oriented. In both feather and beak epidermal cells the Golgi apparatus and smooth endoplasmic reticulum produce vesicles containing lipid-like material which is also found among forming beta-keratin. The contribution of lipids or lipoprotein to the initial aggregation of beta-keratin molecules is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The embryonic scales of two Australian agamine lizards (Hypsilurus spinipes and Physignatus lesueuerii) derive from the undulation of the epidermis to form dome‐shaped scale anlage that later become asymmetric and produce keratinized layers. Glycogen is contained in basal and suprabasal cells of the forming outer scale surface that are destined to differentiate into β‐keratin cells. The outer peridermis is very flat, but the second epidermal layer, provisionally identified as an inner peridermis, is composed of large cells that accumulate vesicular bodies and a network of coarse filaments. The sequence of epidermal layers produced beneath the inner peridermis in these agamine lizards corresponds to that of previously studied lizards, but the first subperidermal layer has characteristics of both clear (keratohyalin‐like granules) and oberhautchen (dark β‐keratin packets) cells. This layer is here identified as an oberhautchen since it fuses with the underlying β‐keratinizing cells forming large spinulae as the entire tissue becomes syncytial so that the units appear to increase in size. These spinulae very likely represent sections of honeycomb‐shaped micro‐ornamentations. A mesos layer appears underneath the β‐layer before hatching. J. Morphol. 240:251–266, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
Histochemical and TEM analysis of the epidermis of Sphenodon punctatus confirms previous histological studies showing that skin-shedding in this relic species involves the periodic production and loss of epidermal generations, as has been well documented in the related Squamata. The generations are basically similar to those that have been described in the latter, and their formation involves a cyclic alternation between beta- and alpha-keratogenesis. The six differences from the previously described squamate condition revealed by this study include: 1) the absence of a well-defined shedding complex; 2) the persistence of plasma membranes throughout the mature beta-layer, including the oberhautchen; 3) the concomitant presence of lipogenic lamellar bodies and PAS-positive mucous granules in most presumptive alpha-keratinizing cells; 4) the presence of the secreted contents of these organelles in the intercellular domains of the three derived tissues, the homologues of the squamate mesos, alpha-, and lacunar cells; 5) the paucity of lamellated lipid deposits in such domains; 6) the presence of keratohyalin-like granules (KHLG) in the presumptive lacunar, clear, and oberhautchen cells. In toto, the absence of many of the precisely definable, different pathways of cytogenesis discernible during squamate epidermal generation production might be interpreted as primitive for lepidosaurs. However, when the evolutionary significance of each of the six differences listed is evaluated separately, it becomes clear that the epidermis of S. punctatus possesses primitive amniote, shared and derived lepidosaurian, and some unique characters. This evaluation further elucidates the concept of a lepidosaurian epidermal generation as a derived manifestation of the sauropsid synapomorphy of vertical alternation of keratin synthesis and shows that further study of keratinocyte differentiation in the tuatara may contribute to our understanding of the origin and evolution of beta-keratinization in sauropsid amniotes.  相似文献   

7.
Epidermal sloughing in lizards is determined by the formation of an intraepithelial shedding complex in which keratohyalin-like granules are formed. The chemical nature of these granules is unknown, as is their role in keratinization. The goal of this study was to test whether they contain some amino acids similar to those found in mammalian keratohyalin. The embryonic and regenerating epidermis of lizards are useful systems to study the formation of these granules. Histochemically keratohyalin-like granules react to histidine and contain some sulfhydryl groups (cysteine). X-ray microanalysis shows that these granules contain sulfur and often phosphorus, two elements also present in the mature clear, oberhautchen, and beta layer. Instead the mesos, alpha, and lacunar layers contain only sulfur. Most sulfur is probably in a disulfide-bonded form, particularly in mature cells of the shedding complex, in large keratohyalin-like granules, and in the beta-keratin layer. Early differentiating beta-keratin cells have the maximal incorporation of tritiated proline, whereas tritiated arginine is slightly more concentrated in the basal layer of the epidermis. A high uptake of tritiated histidine is observed mainly in keratohyalin-like granules of the clear layer, but also in the oberhautchen layer and forming the alpha-lacunar layer. Immunogold electron microscopy shows that keratohyalin-like granules do not localize keratin but are embedded within a keratin network. These results suggest that keratohyalin-like granules of lizards, like mammalian keratohyalin, contain some sulfur-rich and histidine-rich proteins. These granules participate in the process of hardening of the clear layer that molds the spinulae of the deeper oberhautchen to form the superficial microornamentation.  相似文献   

8.
Mammalian epidermis utilizes histidine-rich proteins (filaggrins) to aggregate keratin filaments and form the stratum corneum. Little is known about the involvement of histidine-rich proteins during reptilian keratinization. The formation of the shedding complex in the epidermis of snakes and lizards, made of the clear and the oberhautchen layers, determines the cyclical epidermal sloughing. Differently from snakes, keratohyalin-like granules are present in the clear layer of lizards. The uptake of tritiated histidine into the epidermis of two lizards and one snake has been studied by autoradiography in sections at progressive post-injection periods. At 40 min and 1 hr post-injection keratohyalin-like granules were not or poorly labeled. At 3-22 hr post-injection most of the labeling was present over suprabasal cells destined to form the shedding complex, in keratohyalin-like granules of the clear layer, and in the forming a-layer but was low in the forming b-layer, and in superficial keratinized layers. The analysis of the shedding complex in the pad lamellae (a specialized scale used for climbing) of a gecko showed that the setae and the cytoplasm of clear cells among them are main sites of histidine uptake at 4 hr post-injection. In the snake most of the labeling at 4 hr post-injection was localized in the shedding complex along the boundary between the clear and oberhautchen layers. The present study suggests that, in the epidermis of lepidosaurian reptiles, the synthesis of a histidine-rich protein is involved in the formation of the shedding layer and, as in mammals, in a-keratinization.  相似文献   

9.
We describe the morphology of toe pads in the Himalayan tree frog Philautus annandalii. These are expanded tips of digits and show modifications of their ventral epidermis for adhesion. The outer cells of toe pad epidermis (TPE) bear surface microstructures (0.7 × 0.2 μm), which are keratinized. Their cytoplasm contains no organelles, but pleomorphic nuclei and mucous granules (0.4–0.5 μm) that glue the keratin filaments. In the intermediate cell layer of TPE, similar keratinized microstructures as in the outer cells are present, so that when the outer layer is shed, it is ready with features for adhesion. These cells contain more keratin than the outer cells. The basal cell layer contains thin keratin bundles and usual cell organelles. The dermis contains mucous‐secreting glands, whose ducts open in the outer epidermal cell layer in channels. The dorsal epidermal cells lack surface microstructures and keratin bundles. Ultrastructural features suggest that toe pads utilize the surface microstructures for adhesion aided by mucus, in which the intermediate cell layer seems to bear the shear stress generated during locomotion. Further, TPE can expand and fit into an increased contact area of the substrate. The long, surface microstructures may also help in mechanical interlocking with rough surfaces on plants.  相似文献   

10.
Formation of the first epidermal layers in the embryonic scales of the lizard Lampropholis guichenoti was studied by optical and electron microscopy. Morphogenesis of embryonic scales is similar to the general process in lizards, with well‐developed overlapping scales being differentiated before hatching. The narrow outer peridermis is torn and partially lost during scale morphogenesis. A second layer, probably homologous to the inner peridermis of other lizard species, but specialized to produce lipid‐like material, develops beneath the outer peridermis. Two or three lipogenic layers of this type develop in the forming outer surface of scales near to the hinge region. These layers form a structure here termed “sebaceous‐like secretory cells.” These cells secrete lipid‐like material into the interscale space so that the whole epidermis is eventually coated with it. This lipid‐like material may help to reduce friction and to reduce accumulation of dirt between adjacent extremely overlapping scales. At the end of their differentiation, the modified inner periderm turns into extremely thin cornified cells. The layer beneath the inner peridermis is granulated due to the accumulation of keratohyalin‐like granules, and forms a shedding complex with the oberhautchen, which develops beneath. Typically tilted spinulae of the oberhautchen are formed by the aggregation of tonofilaments into characteristically pointed cytoplasmic outgrowths. Initially, there is little accumulation of β‐keratin packets in these cells. During differentiation, the oberhautchen layer merges with cells of the β‐keratin layer produced underneath, so that a typical syncytial β‐keratin layer is eventually formed before hatching. Between one‐fourth distal and the scale tip, the dermis under epidermal cells is scarce or absent so that the mature scale tip is made of a solid rod of β‐keratinized cells. At the time of hatching, differentiation of a mesos layer is well advanced, and the epidermal histology of scales corresponds to Stage 5 of an adult shedding cycle. The present study confirms that the embryonic sequence of epidermal stratification observed in other species is basically maintained in L. guichenoti. J. Morphol. 241:139–152, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The formation of the stratum corneum in the epidermis of the reptile Sphenodon punctatus has been studied by histochemical, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural methods. Sulfhydryl groups are present in the mesos and pre-alpha-layer but disappear in the keratinized beta-layer and in most of the mature alpha-layer. This suggests a complete cross-linking of keratin filaments. Tyrosine increases in keratinized layers, especially in the beta-layer. Arginine is present in living epidermal layers, in the presumptive alpha-layer, but decreases in keratinized layers. Histidine is present in corneous layers, especially in the intermediate region between the alpha- and a new beta-layer, but disappears in living layers. It is unknown whether histidine-rich proteins are produced in the intermediate region. Small keratohyalin-like granules are incorporated in the intermediate region. The plane of shedding, as confirmed from the study on molts, is located along the basalmost part of the alpha-layer and may involve the degradation of whole cells or cell junctions of the intermediate region. A specific shedding complex, like that of lizards and snakes, is not formed in tuatara epidermis. AE1-, AE2-, or AE3-positive alpha-keratins are present in different epidermal layers with a pattern similar to that previously described in reptiles. The AE1 antibody stains the basal and, less intensely, the first suprabasal layers. Pre-keratinized, alpha- and beta-layers, and the intermediate region remain unlabeled. The AE2 antibody stains suprabasal and forming alpha- and beta-layers, but does not stain the basal and suprabasal layers. In the mature beta-layer the immunostaining disappears. The AE3 antibody stains all epidermal layers but disappears in alpha- and beta-layers. Immunolocalization for chick scale beta-keratins labels the forming and mature beta-layer, but disappears in the mesos and alpha-layer. This suggests the presence of common epitopes in avian and reptilian beta-keratins. Low molecular weight alpha-keratins present in the basal layer are probably replaced by keratins of higher molecular weight in keratinizing layers (AE2-positive). This keratin pattern was probably established since the beginning of land adaptation in amniotes.  相似文献   

12.
Little is known about specific proteins involved in keratinization of the epidermis of snakes. The presence of histidine-rich molecules, sulfur, keratins, loricrin, transglutaminase, and isopeptide-bonds have been studied by ultrastructural autoradiography, X-ray microanalysis, and immunohistochemistry in the epidermis of snakes. Shedding takes place along a shedding complex, which is composed of two layers, the clear and the oberhautchen layers. The remaining epidermis comprises different layers, some of which contain beta-keratins and others alpha-keratins. Weak loricrin, transglutaminase, and sometimes also iso-peptide-bond immunoreactivities are seen in some cells, lacunar cells, of the alpha-layer. Tritiated histidine is mainly incorporated in the shedding complex, especially in dense beta-keratin filaments in cells of the oberhautchen layer and to a small amount in cells of the clear layer. This suggests the presence of histidine-rich, matrix proteins among beta-keratin bundles. The latter contain sulfur and are weakly immunolabeled for beta-keratin at the beginning of differentiation of oberhautchen cells. After merging with beta cells, the dense beta-keratin filaments of oberhautchen cells become immunopositive for beta-keratin. The uptake of histidine decreases in beta cells, where little dense matrix material is present, while pale beta-keratin filaments increase. During maturation, little histidine labeling remains in electron-dense areas of the beta layer and in those of oberhautchen spinulae. Some roundish dense granules of oberhautchen cells rich in sulfur are negative to antibodies for alpha-keratin, beta-keratin, and loricrin. The granules eventually merge with beta-keratin, and probably contribute to the formation of the resistant matrix of oberhautchen cells. In conclusion, beta-keratin, histidine-rich, and sulfur-rich proteins contribute to form snake microornamentations.  相似文献   

13.
松江鲈鱼皮肤的显微和亚显微结构   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
采用光学显微镜、扫描电镜和透射电镜,对松江鲈鱼(Trachidermus fasciatus)成体皮肤的显微和亚显微结构进行了观察。结果表明,松江鲈鱼体表不同部位皮肤的厚薄不一,但基本结构相似。皮肤由表皮和真皮层构成。松江鲈鱼的皮肤裸露无鳞,表皮层较薄,由约4~8层细胞构成,主要由复层上皮细胞和黏液细胞及基底细胞组成。表层细胞呈扁平、多边形,细胞之间主要靠桥粒紧密连接,连接处形成增厚的边缘嵴状突起。表皮细胞游离面向内凹陷,表面形成指纹状微嵴。黏液细胞呈圆形或卵圆形,散布在上皮细胞之间。黏液细胞内的黏原颗粒具有椭圆颗粒状、均匀致密的块状和疏松丝状3种不同形态。真皮通过基膜与表皮相连,由稀疏层和致密层构成。真皮结缔组织在腹部较厚而在其他部位较薄。表皮与真皮连接处有色素层,头部、背部、尾柄和体侧皮肤色素细胞分布多,色素层明显,而腹部和颏部皮肤缺少色素。松江鲈鱼黄河群体真皮层中有角质棘状突起,而滦河群体则无。头部、体侧和尾柄处皮肤上还分布有侧线孔和表面神经丘等感觉器官。  相似文献   

14.
Alibardi L 《Tissue & cell》2003,35(4):288-296
The modified subdigital scales of some lizards allow them to climb vertical surfaces. This is due to the action of millions of tiny setae present in the digital pads. Setae are mainly composed of beta-keratin which may have some modality of aggregation similar to that of barbs and barbules of feathers. Keratins and associated proteins are involved in the organization of setae. The formation of setae in the climbing pad lamellae of the gecko Hemidactylus turcicus has been analyzed under the electron microscope after injection of tritiated histidine and immunocytochemistry for a chick scale beta-keratin. Setae are made up of dense and pale filaments, both oriented along the longer axis of setae. Beta-keratin is present in the oberhautchen layer and in the growing setae which are highly modified oberhautchen cells. Most of the immunolabeling concentrated in the central part of setae. This cross-reactivity suggests that some epitopes in chick beta-keratin are also present in gecko setae. Four hours after injection of tritiated histidine, the labeling is localized over setae, in particular in the dense filaments and less in the pale filaments. Some labeling is also seen in the keratinaceous material present in the cytoplasm of clear cells, which are believed to mold setae. The present observations suggest that both beta-keratin and denser matrix proteins, possibly incorporating histidine, are packed into growing setae. These proteins may be mixed to form pale and dense filaments oriented along the longer axis of setae, a pattern resembling that of barb and barbule cells of feathers. The role of matrix material in the orientation of the deposited beta-keratin during setal outgrowth is discussed with the problem of barb and barbule differentiation in avian feathers.  相似文献   

15.
The highly complex epidermis of Xenoturbella bocki has been studied, mainly employing transmission electron microscopical and histochemical methods. The epidermal organization is described to best advantage in terms of the various cell types present, their intricate interrelationships and their interaction with the highly developed subepidermal membrane complex (SMC). The epidermis is composed mainly of ciliated epidermal supporting cells, at least two types of gland cells (one dominant mucous type with basophilic, alcian blue-positive granules; another possessing acidophilic, PAS-positive granules), several types of nerve cells present in the intraepidermal nerve layer and, finally, some peculiar basally arranged 'pillow cells'. Junctional structures are sparsely developed. The epidermal supporting cell is provided with a distinct cell web, but diagnostic for this cell type is the presence of a very prominent single supporting fibre (SF) composed of supporting filaments. Distally some of these filaments may terminate on the tapering proximal ends of ciliary rootlets, a highly unusual phenomenon. Basally the SF is attached to the SMC in a complex arrangement. The possible relationship of the supporting filaments to cytoskeletal intermediate filaments is discussed. The SF is compared to other cytoplasmic filament systems in mammals and various invertebrates. The ultrastructural organization of Xenoturbella is now fairly well understood, nevertheless, our conclusion must be that it is still not possible to assign an appropriate place for this animal in the systematic-phylogenetic system.  相似文献   

16.
The morphogenesis and ultrastructure of the epidermis of snake embryos were studied at progressive stages of development through hatching to determine the time and modality of differentiation of the shedding complex. Scales form as symmetric epidermal bumps that become slanted and eventually very overlapped. During the asymmetrization of the bumps, the basal cells of the forming outer surface of the scale become columnar, as in an epidermal placode, and accumulate glycogen. Small dermal condensations are sometimes seen and probably represent primordia of the axial dense dermis of the growing tip of scales. Deep, dense, and superficial loose dermal regions are formed when the epidermis is bilayered (periderm and basal epidermis) and undifferentiated. Glycogen and lipids decrease from basal cells to differentiating suprabasal cells. On the outer scale surface, beneath the peridermis, a layer containing dense granules and sparse 25-30-nm thick coarse filaments is formed. The underlying clear layer does not contain keratohyalin-like granules but has a rich cytoskeleton of intermediate filaments. Small denticles are formed and they interdigitate with the oberhautchen spinulae formed underneath. On the inner scale surface the clear layer contains dense granules, coarse filaments, and does not form denticles with the aspinulated oberhautchen. On the inner side surface the oberhautchen only forms occasional spinulae. The sloughing of the periderm and embryonic epidermis takes place in ovo 5-6 days before hatching. There follow beta-, mesos-, and alpha-layers, not yet mature before hatching. No resting period is present but a new generation is immediately produced so that at 6-10 h posthatching an inner generation and a new shedding complex are forming beneath the outer generation. The first shedding complex differentiates 10-11 days before hatching. In hatchlings 6-10 h old, tritiated histidine is taken up in the epidermis 4 h after injection and is found mainly in the shedding complex, especially in the apposed membranes of the clear layer and oberhautchen cells. This indicates that a histidine-rich protein is produced in preparation for shedding, as previously seen in lizard epidermis. The second shedding (first posthatching) takes place at 7-9 days posthatching. It is suggested that the shedding complex in lepidosaurian reptiles has evolved after the production of a histidine-rich protein and of a beta-keratin layer beneath the former alpha-layer.  相似文献   

17.
The ultrastructure of the epidermis of the lizard ( Lacerta vivipara ) one day after sloughing is described. The non-keratinized layers of the epidermis are essentially similar in structure to those of amphibians and mammals. The cells of the basal layer are not however separated from each other by the large spaces described in the amphibian (Farquhar & Palade, 1965). The middle layers of the epidermis at this stage of the sloughing cycle produce neither the characteristic mucous granules found in amphibians nor the keratohyalin granules of mammals. A small number of granules corresponding in size and location to the "Odland bodies" of both mammalian and amphibian epidermis are, however, present. The intermediate layer cells also contain a number of bodies similar in appearance to those described by Farquhar & Palade as lysosomes in amphibian skin. These structures are both osmium iodide and acid phosphatase positive. Unlike the condition in amphibians and mammals, the cytoplasm of cells in the layer immediately beneath the keratinized strata is honeycombed with small vesicles, and contains large irregular vacuoles of uncertain content. Certain nonkeratinizing elements within the epidermis are tentatively interpreted as nerve terminations. Two morphologically distinct keratinized strata can be distinguished, the inner stratum consisting of flattened cells similar to those of the stratum corneum of mammalian epidermis; individual cell outlines cannot be distinguished in the outer stratum, which has a structure similar to that of avian feather keratin. A shallow surface zone of the outer keratinized stratum has been identified as the Oberhautchen. This consists of longitudinally disposed leaflets or laminae which are responsible for the sculptured pattern of the epidermal surface. The observations reported here provide a basis for analysis of changes occurring at other stages of the sloughing cycle.  相似文献   

18.
Alibardi L  Toni M 《Tissue & cell》2005,37(6):423-433
The distribution and molecular weight of epidermal proteins of gecko lizards have been studied by ultrastructural, autoradiographic, and immunological methods. Setae of the climbing digital pads are cross-reactive to antibodies directed against a chick scutate scale beta-keratin but not against feather beta-keratin. Cross-reactivity for mammalian loricrin, sciellin, filaggrin, and transglutaminase are present in alpha-keratogenic layers of gecko epidermis. Alpha-keratins have a molecular weight in the range 40-58 kDa. Loricrin cross-reactive bands have molecular weights of 42, 50, and 58 kDa. Bands for filaggrin-like protein are found at 35 and 42 kDa, bands for sciellin are found at 40-45 and 50-55 kDa, and bands for transglutaminase are seen at 48-50 and 60 kDa. The specific role of these proteins remains to be elucidated. After injection of tritiated histidine, the tracer is incorporated into keratin and in setae. Tritiated proline labels the developing setae of the oberhautchen and beta layers, and proline-labeled proteins (beta-keratins) of 10-14, 16-18, 22-24 and 32-35 kDa are extracted from the epidermis. In whole epidermal extract (that includes the epidermis with corneous layer and the setae of digital pads), beta-keratins of low-molecular weight (10, 14-16, and 18-19 kDa) are prevalent over those at higher molecular weight (34 and 38 kDa). In contrast, in shed epidermis of body scales (made of corneous layer only while setae were not collected), higher molecular weight beta-keratins are present (25-27 and 30-34 kDa). This suggests that a proportion of the small beta-keratins present in the epidermis of geckos derive from the differentiating beta layer of scales and from the setae of digital pads. Neither small nor large beta-keratins of gecko epidermis cross-react with an antibody specifically directed against the feather beta-keratin of 10-12 kDa. This result shows that the 10 and 14-16 kDa beta-keratins of gecko (lepidosaurian) have a different composition than the 10-12 kDa beta-keratin of feather (archosaurian). It is suggested that the smaller beta-keratins in both lineages of sauropsids were selected during evolution in order to build elongated bundles of keratin filaments to make elongated cells. Larger beta-keratins in reptilian scales produce keratin aggregations with no orientation, used for mechanical protection.  相似文献   

19.
Subcultivated rat lingual epithelial cells when grown on collagen gels at a liquid-gas interface achieve a highly ordered state that closely resembles the parent tissue. Three distinct cell layers are present; basal, spinous, and keratinized. Basal cells are cuboidal in shape and form a complex interface with the underlying collagen fibrils. Spinous cells form a layer 5–10 cells thick and, with the exception of keratohyalin granules, possess an organellar complement identical with native cells, including membrane-coating granules. The keratinized cell layer increases in thickness as a function of time spent in culture. Forty or more plies of terminally differentiated cells are observed following a 30-day culture period. Terminally differentiated cells while retaining pycnotic nuclei and some other organellar debris are principally envelope-enclosed squames filled with tonofilaments. Keratinization is a continuing process which occurs simultaneously across the full expanse of the culture surface. The high degree of tissue organization observed appears to be the result of feeding the cultures from the undersurface.  相似文献   

20.
A STUDY OF THE FINE STRUCTURE OF THE EPIDERMIS OF RANA PIPIENS   总被引:8,自引:6,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The epidermis of adult Rana pipiens has been studied by electron microscopy and histological and histochemical methods. It was found that the epidermis is engaged in the production of both keratin and mucus. The basal cells are mainly filled with tonofilaments, whereas the cells located in the mid-portion of the epidermis contain both tonofilaments and mucous granules. Golgi vesicles and endoplasmic reticulum are found in relative abundance in the mucus-producing cells and seem to be involved in the production of mucous granules. The mucus seen was partly retained within the cells and partly secreted into the intercellular spaces. The outermost keratinized cells contain mainly filaments and a few remnants of cell constituents.  相似文献   

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