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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Bone ; Scales ; Development ; Hemichromis bimaculatus (Teleostei, Perciformes)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The development of the frontal bone and the formation of the first head scales are described during post-embryonic ontogeny of Hemichromis bimaculatus, using light and transmission electron microscopy. The frontal bone originates close to the cartilaginous taenia marginalis in a loose mesenchymal cell condensation (=primordium) lying 1 μm from the epidermis with which it establishes no cell contacts. The anlage appears at 4.2 mm standard length (SL) in the form of the membranodermal component of the bone, and extends first over the brain and then over the eye; the neurodermal component forms later to surround the supraorbital canal. The first head scales appear at 10.0 mm SL in a dense cell condensation (papilla) adjoining the epidermal-dermal junction and, once formed, remain in this position. In both organs, the initial matrix is similarly composed of “woven-fibred” bone that soon mineralizes in a similar manner to other dermal elements. In some areas of the frontal bone, “parallel-fibred” bone is deposited unequally on both surfaces, whereas isopedine is deposited in scales on the deep surface only. Osteoblastic features confirm this eccentric growth. Differences in the shape, organization and localization of the mesenchymal condensations giving rise to the frontal bone and to the scale reflect the existence of two types of dermal cell condensations. Our data are compared with those available for the post-cranial dermal skeleton of fishes both from a developmental and structural viewpoint. Structural differences in the matrices of the frontal bone and scales are discussed in a phylogenetic perspective.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Scale formation ; Mineralization ; Epidermis ; Cichlasoma octofasciatum, (Teleostei) ; Hemichromis bimaculatus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The region between the epidermis and the surface of the overlapping part of scales has been studied in two cichlid teleosts using transmission electron microscopy. In a few specimens only, numerous mineralized spherules (∼1 μm in diameter) are observed in the loose dermis and at the scale surface, and form a large part of the superficial outer limiting layer of the scale. In the loose dermis (stratum laxum) and close to the scale surface spherules are either free or included in dermal cells. When free, they are dispersed in the extracellular matrix of the dermis, among the fibrils of anchoring bundles, and fused with the scale surface. When included in cell vacuoles, they lie close to the lamina densa and to the scale surface. Steps in the formation of the mineralized spherules are only seen in the lamina densa of the basement membrane. The spherules contain needle-like mineral crystals radially orientated and an organic matrix of stippled material and dense granules, some of which form concentric lines around the centre of the spherules. The results suggest that mineralized spherules form in the lamina densa and pass through the dermis to the scale surface in which they are incorporated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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