Microtubules, Microfilaments, and Membranes in Phagocytosis: Structure and Function of the Oral Apparatus of the Ciliate Climacostomum virens |
| |
Authors: | D FISCHER-DEFOY K HAUSMANN |
| |
Institution: | Department of Cytology, University of Heidelberg, D-6900 Heidelberg, Federal Republic of Germany |
| |
Abstract: | Climacostomum virens uses oral membranelles to drive suspended food particles into its buccal cavity. The cavity leads to a buccal tube which extends into the cell by as much as half a cell length. The inner end of this tube is delimited by a haplokinety (two rows of basal bodies). Internal to this zone is the cytostome and cytopharynx where food vacuoles form. The buccal tube is encircled by a ring of fibrous material, the cytostomal cord, in the region of the cytostome immediately below the haplokinety. Ribbons of postciliary microtubules extend from the kinetosomes of the haplokinety, attach to the cytopharyngeal membrane, and pass under the cytostomal cord. They become broader and expand into the cytoplasm. Cytopharyngeal vesicles pass between the microtubular ribbons and fuse with the cytopharyngeal membrane to generate membrane for forming food vacuoles. The cytopharyngeal vesicles contain a material which is secreted into the forming food vacuoles. Ciliates continue to feed after incubation in a medium containing cycloheximide, indicating that they draw on a pre-existing pool of membrane when forming the food vacuole. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|