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Apical surface topography of invaginating and noninvaginating cells. A scanning-transmission study of amphibian neurulae
Authors:Jan Löfberg
Affiliation:Institute of Zoology, University of Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract:A comparative study on scanning and transmission electron microscopy of apical ultrastructure in epithelia of the axolotl neurula (Ambystoma mexicanum, Cope) is presented. The aim of the work is to determine whether apical surface topography is correlated to other morphological features of the cells, and whether there are any ultrastructural differences between surfaces of invaginating and noninvaginating regions. Scanning specimens are prepared by critical point drying and benzene freeze-drying. Comparisons show that the scanning specimens are comparable to the standard transmission specimens with regard to surface topography.Apical surfaces are sculptured by folds and microvilli-like processes. Assessment of the relative abundance of surface projections shows that these occur in largest numbers on invaginating, bottle-shaped cells in the neural plate and in the notochord rudiment of stage-16 larvae. It is proposed that the surface projections may support apical narrowing in these cells, by facilitating endocytosis, and that they may be lateral attachment organelles. It is suggested that the morphogenesis of the invaginating cells may be the result of coordination between microfilaments, apical endocytosis, microtubules, and “adhesive peripheral surface projections.”
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