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The cells that secrete the beaks in octopods and squids (Mollusca,Cephalopoda)
Authors:Professor P. N. Dilly  Marion Nixon
Affiliation:(1) Department of Anatomy, University College London, Gower Street, London, England;(2) Department of Structural Biology, St. George's Hospital Medical School, Blackshaw Road, SW17 London, England
Abstract:A single layer of cell secrets the hard cephalopod beaks. The beccublasts are tall columnar cells that separate the beak from the surrounding buccal muscles, and must serve to attach these muscles to the beak. Within the cell layer there are three types of cells. The first, and most frequently found contain cell-long fibrils. These fibrils may have contractile and tensile properties. Complex trabeculae extend from the beccublasts into the matrix of the beak. The fibrils are attached to these trabeculae and at the other end of the cells they are anchored near to the beccublast-muscle cell interface, closely associated with the muscles that move the beak. The second group of cells contain masses of endoplasmic reticulum the cysternae of which are arranged along the long axis of the cell. These cells also contain dense granules and are probably the major source of beak hard tissue. It is probable that each cell secretes its own column of beak hard tissue. The third group of cells cells contains a mixture of fibrils and secretory tissue. In the beccublast layer there are changes in the proportion of the three types of cells depending upon the region sampled. In the region where growth is most active there are mostly secretory cells, whereas near the biting and wearing tip there are mainly anchoring type cells.
Keywords:Beak  Octopods  Squids  Formation  Cell types  Light and electron microscopy
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