ISSN:
1615-6102
Keywords:
Adrenalin
;
Cyclic AMP
;
Ejecting process
;
Epixenosomes
;
Membrane receptors
;
Cytochemistry
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Summary The extrusive apparatus is the most prominent and complex structure of epixenosomes. In the present paper the mechanisms activating its ejecting process were investigated by means of in vivo treatments and cytochemical procedures at the ultrastructural level. The results obtained clearly demonstrated that the ejecting process in epixenosomes is triggered by the detection of external signals through membrane receptors and the consequent activation of the adenylate cyclase-cyclic AMP system as a transduction mechanism. The membrane receptors coming into play have an affinity for soybean agglutinin and have a precise localization at the top of the organism, just where a membrane interruption appears as a first step in the whole process. The factors that trigger ejection in nature are still unknown. In the laboratory, ejection was obtained in the presence of adrenalin, which has been proved to bind to the same receptors shown to have affinity for soybean agglutinin. So epixenosomes appear to possess specific binding molecules for a mammalian hormone in the appropriate location, i.e., in the plasma membrane, and this hormone induces a precise biological response. These results are particularly interesting if we consider that epixenosomes are enigmatic organisms in which prokaryotic and eukaryotic characteristics appear to coexist.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01279884
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