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  • 1970-1974  (2,149)
  • 1930-1934  (1,172)
  • 1910-1914  (562)
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  • 1850-1859
  • Cell & Developmental Biology  (3,883)
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  • 201
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 142 (1974), S. 241-263 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Regions of the crayfish kidney were examined by electron microscopy. Coelsmosac cells are loosely bound together by desmosome-like spot junctions, and connected to the basal lamina via characteristic pedicels. The cytoplasm contains numerous vesicles and vacuoles of various sizes and is often crowded with large, lysosome-like granules or dense bodies. The morphology suggests a filtration mechanism with reabsorption of materials such as protein from the filtrate and secretion of other substances into the lumen.The labyrinth is composed of cuboidal to columnar cells which possess a brush border, long and narrow intercellular spaces, basal plasmalemmal invaginations and typical cytoplasmic components. Two sub-regions are distinguishable. The morphology of labyrinth I suggests that these cells move fluid isotonically across the epithelium. Labyrinth II, in addition to isotonic transport, appears to be more active in the endocytic uptake and intracellular digestion of large molecules such as protein.The nephridial canal consists of cells which lack a brush border, but display extensive basal invaginations associated with elongated mitochondria. A proximal and distal region are cytologically distinguishable. Proximally, the cells are small and filled with mitochondria throughout. Scattered within the cytoplasm are vesicles, vacuoles, diffuse glycogen, free ribosomes, dense bodies and some rough endoplasmic reticulum. Distally, the cells are less compact, larger, and cuboidal to columnar in shape. The cytoplasm is similar to that of the proximal cells, but the basal invaginations are even larger and more extensive. The morphology of cells in both regions of the nephridial canal is highly suggestive of active solute reabsorption, probably occurring against an osmotic gradient.
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  • 202
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 142 (1974), S. 321-327 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The distal depression of the ventral pedal groove of Mytilus californianus was investigated by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. This part of the byssus forming system is responsible for the formation of the attachment plaque of the byssus thread.The longitudinal pedal ducts open into this area and the floor of the distal depression is covered by specialized cilia which terminate as biconcave flattened discs or “paddles.” The disc is formed by a 360° curvature of the axoneme tip within the ciliary membrane. The diameter of the disc is about 1.33 μ while that of the shaft portion is 0.24 μ. There are about 11 cilia per square micron of surface area and the necks of the cilia are separated from each other by a web-like extension of apical cytoplasm extending from the epithelial cells.It is proposed that these specialized cilia function as microscopic spatulas for the application of the adhesive plaque material to substrate surfaces. The pattern of surface convection currents seen in vivo tends to support this hypothesis.
    Additional Material: 10 Ill.
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  • 203
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 142 (1974), S. 395-409 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Light and electron microscope studies of development of the ultraviolet-reflecting scales of male Colias eurytheme butterflies show that basic developmental processes are similar to those of other scales. The ridges form between bundles of microfilaments and as they form they buckle to produce the lamellae seen in the adult scales. There is evidence that the buckling may be purely in response to mechanical stress and that some of the bundles of microfilaments may produce such stresses.
    Additional Material: 1 Ill.
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  • 204
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 142 (1974), S. 379-394 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: A large extrachromosomal mass of Feulgen positive material, the DNA body, has been visualized in early prophase oocytes of crickets (Orthoptera: Gryllidae) representative of the closely related subfamilies Gryllinae and Nemobiinae. A similar structure is present in oocytes of representatives of two subfamilies of crickets (subfamilies Oecanthinae and Gryllotalpinae) which taxonomically and phylogenetically are quite separate from those mentioned previously. In situ hybridization demonstrates that the body contains amplified copies of genes coding for ribosomal RNA. Unlike the DNA body in early diplotene oocytes of representatives of the subfamily Gryllinae, which is closely associated with the developing nucleolar apparatus, the DNA body in oocytes of the Oecanthinae and Gryllotalpinae cannot be demonstrated during diplotene. In the Oecanthinae, the nucleolar apparatus of early diplotene stage oocytes is composed of four to seven separate structures, the ribonucleoprotein of which has a characteristically lamellated appearance. During late diplotene, these nucleoli give rise to many smaller structures which are distributed throughout the germinal vesicle. In early diplotene stage oocytes of Scapteriscus acletus (Subfamily: Gryllotalpinae), the nucleolar apparatus consists of a single compact mass of ribonucleoprotein. In contrast to the oocytes of all other crickets that have been studied, the nucleolus of S. acletus remains single throughout diplotene. In situ hybridization analysis indicates that the amplified genes coding for rRNA which are localized in the DNA body of early prophase oocytes become incorporated into this compact nucleolar mass. Differences in nucleolar structure appear to reflect differences in the organization of amplified genes coding for rRNA.
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  • 205
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 143 (1974) 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 206
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: An arbitrary classification scheme is presented for the thirteen distinct types of secretory cells distinguished within the central nervous system of Dermacentor variabilis by several specific and general neurosecretory staining techniques. Comparisons to classic arthropod neurosecretory cell types are made and the histochemical implications of the chromophilic response of various secretory products are discussed. Dermacentor cells of Types I, VII, IX and X may be considered neurosecretory on the basis of intracellular elaboration and discharge of secretory product. Type II, III, IV, V, VI, XI and XII cells are considered as putative neurosecretory cells although secretory products were detected only within the perikarya. The large Type XII cells are also similar to motor neurones reported from other arachnids. Cells of Types VIII and XIII appear to be glial elements. The secretory products of Type XIIIA are distributed within trabecular processes in the subperineurium. These products may play a trophic role or they may have some endocrine function as a form of “gliosecretion”.
    Additional Material: 2 Tab.
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  • 207
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 143 (1974), S. 107-119 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Rostral pores are epidermal invaginations which occur on the internarial region of most chelonians. Representatives of all Recent chelonian families and 67 of the 74 extant genera were examined grossly and/or histologically. Pores are absent only in the families Carettochelyidae, Cheloniidae, and Dermochelyidae. The number and microscopic structure of pores vary markedly within and between taxa. Morphological data suggest that rostral pores could function in mechanoreception. The possible origin and evolution of rostral pores are discussed in the context of other chelonian integumentary speializations.
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  • 208
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974) 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 209
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 237-253 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: This study of the testicular capsule of rat, dog, cat and human has confirmed the presence of three layers, viz., the tunica vaginalis, the tunica albuginea proper and an innermost tunica vasculosa. Smooth muscle cells are present in the tunica albuginea of all four species and are more prominent at the posterior pole of the testis where the capsule merges with the mediastinum testis. In the rat and the dog, a few striated muscle fibers also are present.While the tunica albuginea is to be considered as a dense connective tissue, the arrangement of the collagen bundles and the presence of a relatively high content of elastic fibers probably permits changes in size of the testis following spontaneous contractions of the muscle elements, which are known to occur. The role of the testicular capsule in sperm transport is discussed in relation to other factors, the spontaneous contractions of the capsule presumably having a “pumping” action and aiding the movement of non-motile spermatozoa from the testis to the epididymis.The presence of striated muscle fibers in two species is of interest and, while these may function in a similar manner to the smooth muscle, they may represent simply an unusual differentiation of embryonic myoblasts.
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  • 210
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 195-215 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The surface structures of the antennular flagella of Pagurus alaskensis are described in detail. Attention is directed towards the surface morphology of two types of possible sensilla: (1) exoskeletal pores (1.0-3.0 μm in diameter); (2) setae of various kinds. In addition, small (0.1-0.2 μm) pits occur in the exoskeleton which are not considered to be sensory in function. The exoskeletal pores are found at fairly specific locations on both the inner and outer flagella, particularly on the short segments of the outer flagella. Neither the inner nor the outer flagella are bilaterally symmetrical with respect to their setal armature. On the outer flagellum six groups of setae may be distinguished: lateralmesial; dorsal; ventral; accessory; aesthetasc; setae of the distal segment. On the inner flagellum setae of the mesial and lateral rows form distinctive groups. The morphology, orientation and locations of all the flagellar setae are defined and where possible the numbers of the various morphological types within the specific setal groups are given. It is noteworthy that many setal types have obvious apical pores and yet no pores could be found in the chemoreceptive aesthetasc setae. The functions of the various setae are discussed in relation to their topographical position and to existing electrophysiological and behavioral data. Some suggestions are made about future experiments to demonstrate the central connections of specific sensilla or groups of sensilla and to show their significance in the whole animal.
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  • 211
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    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 217-235 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Blood vessels in Nereis japonica were studied by electron microscopy. It was found that blood vessels regardless of location were similar in the basic organization of the basal lamina and the usual presence of collagen fibrils on the vessel wall. Differences arise, depending on whether the outside of the basal lamina is covered by peritoneal cells, by gut epithelium, or by epidermis. These relate to the location of the vessels in mesenteries, gut or epidermis, but do not reflect basic structural differences in the vessels themselves. Furthermore, it was concluded that true endothelial cells do not exist in the circulatory system of Nereis japonica and that, in this respect, the system is essentially different from that of vertebrates, in which endothelial cells line the vessels of a closed circulatory system. These considerations lead to the further conclusion that the vascular lumen in Nereis is essentially interstitial space and that the system, which has been known as a typical “closed” circulatory system in annelids, is actually an open circulatory system. Peritoneal cells covering the walls of internal vessels show various degrees of muscular differentiation and those possessing myofilaments may be called “myomesothelial cells.”
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  • 212
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The nymphal and adult cervicothoracic skeleton of Euborellia annulipes (Lucas) is described and discussed.
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  • 213
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 269-273 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The mean number (± S. D.) of nucleoli per hepatic cell was determined for inbred mice of the BALB/c and C57BL/6J strains, using azure B bromide. Because thyroid hormones have been reported to increase nucleolar number in cultured human cells, certain of the males received parenteral triiodothyronine (T3). Hormone effect was demonstrated by a two-fold increase in hepatic mitochondrial α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase activity. Results included the following: (1) In the BALB/c strain, the nucleolar number of the T3 treated males (5.0 ± 2.4) was slightly but significantly higher (p 〈 0.001) than that of the controls (4.8 ± 2.3). For the C57BL/6J strain, however, the nucleolar number of the treated males (4.0 ± 1.7) was significantly lower than the controls (4.2 ± 1.8; p 〈 0.001). (2) The difference in nucleolar numbers of untreated males of both inbred strains was highly significant (p 〈 0.001). (3) The nucleolar number in BALB/c female cells (4.1 ± 1.8) was significantly lower than that of male BALB/c cells (p ≪ 0.001).
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  • 214
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 297-321 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Each silk gland of Calpodes ethlius consists of five distinct regions: the duct, the green, anterior, middle and posterior regions. Although the gland increases approximately tenfold in length during the larval life, the number of cells remains constant with a concomitant increase in ploidy which is not constant either throughout larval life or in the different regions of the gland. Histochemistry on the glands of the mid-fifth instar larva shows that progressively more mucosubstances are deposited in the lumen, so that while in the distal regions there is only one weakly acidic deposit, this is increased to three more acidic bands in the proximal regions. These bands can be correlated with materials of different electron density. All five regions have characteristic secretory ultrastructure, with prominent secretory vesicles or granules and microvilli. However, the posterior and middle regions have electron-translucent vesicles and relatively short microvilli, while the other three regions have electron dense granules and a more complex, microvillate apical surface. This complexity is greatest in the duct which suggests that it may function in water reabsorption.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
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  • 215
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    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 275-295 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: A band of flexible cuticle encircles the deutonymph, separating the dorsal and ventral plates. The coxae are large, flat and fused with one another to form most of the ventor. Individual coxal margins are redefined as sternites, epimerites or simply apodemes according to which margins fuse with which others. A given area of cuticle may have patches of dark or light cuticle not corresponding to particular structures or cuticular contours; this is a source of confusion to taxonomists.Each leg has a dicondylic coxal-trochantal (adduction-abduction) and trochantal-femoral (promotion-remotion) joint with opposing muscles. The three more distal monocondylic joints (flexion-extension) have only flexor muscles; extension is by increased haemolymph pressure.The five apodemes of the sucker plate provide rigidity; the four suckers attach by a flexible cuticular ring to a solid flange or socket in the sucker plate. The sucker muscles attach to the center of each sucker. The flat, external face of the sucker plate apodemes may complement sucker action by adhesion. Coxal discs and sucker plate discs are identical, contain birefringent cuticular elements, and are considered modified setae.Functional mouthparts and a pharynx are lacking, but a cheliceral anlage is present. The esophagus, midgut and caecae, and malpighian tubules are lumenless and the cells small. The hindgut has a lumen, larger cells and opens externally via the anus. Whereas the digestive tract is regressed, the reproductive system is yet incompletely developed. In older deutonymphs anlagen of ducts, accessory glands and gonads are discernible. The nature of the haemocoel and peritoneum remains nuclear.The central nerve mass is conspicuously large for the size of the deutonymph. The supraesophageal ganglion gives rise to the cheliceral nerves; all other nerves arise from the subesophageal ganglion. Most major nerves were traced to the effector organs.The muscles are divided into leg, dorso-ventral (derived from coxal muscles), dorsal, sucker, and anogenital muscles. The trochantal adductor muscles originate on an endosternite, which is supported by muscles running to the dorsal hysterosoma. The dorso-ventral and propodosomal retractor muscles affect haemolymph pressure. The massive sucker retractor muscles are unique to this instar. Anogenital muscles are not well developed.
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  • 216
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The pattern of transport and distribution of rabbit embryos in the oviduct and uterus was studied 15 to 168 hours post coitum (p. c.). The reproductive tract was frozen in liquid nitrogen, thawed, and cleared in benzyl-benzoate solution using Orsini's technique. The location of the eggs and the ampullary-isthmic junction were identified using transmitted light from a dissecting microscope. Accumulation of the eggs in the oviduct occured in two phases. In the first phase the eggs were retained above the ampullaryisthmic junction, 3-12 hours after ovulation. In the second phase, the eggs were retained 36-60 hours after ovulation, above the uterotubal junction (at a distance approximately 12 % of the oviductal length). The rate of transport of individual eggs in the oviduct, and the time of the entry of eggs into the uterus were variable. Au 78 hours p. c. most blastocysts occupied the proximal half of the uterine horn, although some appeared very close to the internal os of the cervix. Spacing of blastocysts in the uterus, 114 to 120 hours p. c., involved movement of blastocysts away from the cervix. Unfertilized eggs remained in the uterus, along with developing blastocysts 168 hours p. c. Few eggs were retained in the oviduct at 108 and 115 hours p. c.
    Additional Material: 7 Ill.
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  • 217
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974) 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 218
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: An ultrastructural study of the hindgut, associated hepatopancreatic lobes and hepatopancreatic ducts of the terrestrial isopod, Armadillidium vulgre was undertaken. The simple epithelium which lines the heptopancreas consists of two cell types, S and B. Both cell types have numerous microvilli. A simple epithelium consisting of one cell type lines the hepatopancreatic ducts and the hindgut. Microvilli are not evident in the duct. The cells of the duct and the hindgut are covered with a cuticle. Dense granular bodies are characteristic of the cytoplasm of the duct cells. The hindgut epithelial cells have pronounced apical and basal-lateral cytoplasmic infoldings. Apical infoldings from large subcuticular spaces, especially in the posterior hindgut. Microtubules and large numbers of mitochondria are associated with the cytoplasmic infoldings. Large microtubular bundles are seen in the peripheral cytoplasm, and residual bodies are present in the central cytoplasm. Lateral plasma membranes form septate desmosomes in the apical region of cells, while zonulae adherentes and intercellular spaces are found basal to the septate desmosomes. The cellular organization of the hindgut is suggestive of cells active in water and ion transport.
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  • 219
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    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 361-379 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The ultrastructure of the phyllobranchiate type gill of the shrimp, Caridina japonica, was studied. The most characteristic feature of the open circulatory system of Cardina is the vascular lumen of the gill capillaries which is considered to be the interstitial space. The following observations substantiate this view: (1) a thin fibrous layer forms the innermost structure of the walls of gill capillaries and is in direct contact with the blood stream; (2) filaments in the fibrous layer are assumed to correspond to the reticular fibers in the interstitial space of the alveolar wall of mammals; (3) the absence of the endothelium as well as the endothelial basal lamina which are the essential structural components of the closed circulatory system in vertebrates. The gill epithelium contains intermediate, septate and tight junctions. The first two form a junctional complex near the apical cell border and may function as a permeability barrier by occluding the intercellular space as well as functioning in electrical coupling and cellular adhesion. The tight junction is spot-like and may serve no role in the function of the permeability barrier.
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  • 220
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    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 407-419 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The hermit crab, Pagurus pollicarus, has the same organization in its fourth abdominal ganglion as its macruran relatives in spite of the reduction in abdominal muscles, sensory receptors, and appendages. Connective axons are grouped into discrete bundles between which five groups of commissural fibers run to connect left and right sides. The neurites of ventral cell bodies run dorsally in characteristic groups between the connective bundles. The hermit crab fourth ganglion has two thirds as many cells as the crayfish and is laterally compressed. This reduction appears related to the reduction in the sizes of the ganglionic roots. The ventral fine fibered neuropil is larger on the left than the right side reflecting the loss of pleopods on the right side. The basic organization of decapod abdominal ganglia appears to permit considerable integrative flexibility within a relatively conservative morphological framework.
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  • 221
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Comparative histological observations of the eyes of Typhlotriton spelaeus and several epigean, plethodontid species indicate that the principal postembryonic degenerative changes in the eyes of T. spelaeus involve the eyelids and cornea, visual cells, outer plexiform layer, and the pigment epithelium. Ordinarily these changes were initiated after metamorphosis, before attainment of sexual maturity, but a few larvae had degenerating retinae.The corneal epithelium becomes irregular and thin as eyelids develop during and after metamorphosis, but retains its larval structure in animals in which eyelid overlap is incomplete. Disruption and vacuolation of the lens sometimes occurs in postmetamorphic animals with degenerating visual cells. Retinal degeneration involves reduction of the inner and outer segments of visual cells, loss of the outer plexiform layer, and retraction of apical processes of the pigment epithelium. In its earliest stage, retinal reduction is first apparent at the retinal margin where visual cells are normally less well-differentiated, but in its terminal stage reduction has gone to completion over the entire retina. Extent of retinal degeneration in adults is directly related to postmetamorphic age but there is variability in each age group. Females generally have smaller eyes, and more extensive degeneration of visual cells than males. The loss of visual function in adults is correlated with extensive visual cell degeneration.
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  • 222
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: This report adds to the available information on comparative histology of mammalian bone and introduces a semi-quantitative approach to its study. Bone samples consisted of large fragments of rib tibia and/or femur from humans, laboratory rodents and from animals that died at the Bronx Zoological Gardens. A total of 44 bone specimens representing six mammalian orders were available. Decalcified paraffin-embedded 10 μm histological cross-sections were examined at × 320. Qualitative observations were supplemented with measurements of the frequency and size distributions of Haversian and non-Haversian canals. The relative distribution of lacunae was also ascertained. The standard textbook description of mammalian bone as consisting mainly of secondary osteons was not generally seen except in Primate (especially human) bone. Rats showed a few scattered osteon-like structures, but bones of Marsupialia, Insectivora, Artiodactyla and Carnivora were entirely devoid of them. Generally, vascular bone with longitudinal canals was seen except in Lorisidae which showed a reticular type of bone. The distribution of primary longitudinal canals and the number of “filled” or “apparently empty” lacunae/unit area of bone varied both inter-species and among different areas in the same bone. Large areas of acellular and non-vascular bone were encountered in all specimens. This preliminary study revealed that species differences i bone microstructure involve the relative distribution of the same basic components which lend themselves to quantitative treatment. Comparative investigations of bone histology at many ontogenetic and phylogenetic levels should yield significant quantitative information in bone biology.
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  • 223
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Spleens from normal, healthy cats, dogs and rabbits were perfused with Ringer solution until only a few red cells remained. After fixation of the intact organ, small pieces of tissue were dried by a camphene method and examined under the scanning electron microscope. In all three species the red cells remaining in the spleen were either reticulocytes, spiculated cells, or cells of tear-drop shape and they were found adhering to macrophages and reticulum cells throughout the red pulp. Elongated masses were found on the sinusal surface of fenestrated endothelium (only in dog and rabbit); some of these appeared to be cells of tear-drop shape emerging from the cords into the sinus. This may perhaps denote a pitting process, as suggested by others, but it cannot be a unique function of fenestrated endothelium for red cells of similar shape were found elsewhere in the pulp. In all three species the network of reticulum fibres presents a very large contact surface area for blood cells and it seems likely that increased cell stickiness, rather than decreased deformability, leads to the trapping of immature red cells in the spleen.
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  • 224
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    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 453-461 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Allografts of embryonic limb buds were grafted orthotopically on embryos of Chelydra serpentina. Donors were from a different geographic area, the same geographic area, or siblings. The initial indication of rejection was excessive sloughing of epidermis. This was followed by loss of muscle, claws and bone.Early histological changes involved an infiltration of mononuclear or rejection cells primarily associated with small blood vessels of the connective tissue. Subsequently, muscle and bone were lost and they were replaced by connective tissue. Epidermis and nerves persisted. The skeletal cartilages were isolated from immunological activity.Although the incidence of rejection was essentially the same in sibling and non-sibling combinations, the initial external signs of rejection occurred earliest when donor and host were from different geographic areas but not later than two years after hatching. The first signs of rejection in sibling allografts occurred not later than three years after hatching. Animals that survived these periods without rejection did not show subsequent rejection.
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  • 225
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    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 463-468 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Allografts of skin were observed in Chelydra serpentina. The response to these grafts was modified by a previous transplantation of a limb bud at an early embryonic stage. When the same donor was used for all transplants, the first skin graft was accepted by the host. A second skin graft, however, was rejected at about the rate of a simple first set allograft of skin. The animals were conditioned by the embryonic limb graft; this embryonic graft can be undergoing rejection at the same time a first set skin graft from the same donor was being accepted. The tolerance induced by the embryonic graft was sepcific for its donor.
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  • 226
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    Journal of Morphology 144 (1974), S. 485-497 
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: As part of program of research into insect cellular immunity, an integrated light and electron microscopic study of the hemocytes of seven members of the Order Dictyoptera has been made. In fresh hemolymph, five cell types, the prohemocytes, plasmatocytes, granular cells, spherule cells and cystocytes, are easilv distinguished. However, in thick Araldite sections and in thin sections in the electron microscope it is sometimes difficult to identify the various cell types. The reasons for this difficulty are discussed.Granules with a microtubular substrcture are found in the plasmatocytes, spherule cells and cystocytes. In the plasmatocytes these granules have a different ultrastructure than those in the spherule cells and cystocytes. The in vitro fragility of these granules in both the spherule cells and cystocytes during coagulation partially explains the previous confusion in distinguishing these two cell types.Evidence is presented which indicates that the plasmatocytes, granular cells and spherule cells represent a developmental series originating from the prohemocytes. Where exactly the cystocytes are derived from is unknown.
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  • 227
    ISSN: 0362-2525
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: A cardiaca-allatal commissural plexus (CACP) lies between and partly overlapping the postcommissural lobes of the corpora cardiaca (CC), the nervi corpori allati I (NCA I) and the corpora allata (CA). CACP, which is often continuous posteriorly with a complicated postallatal plexus (PAP), comprises a variable number of connectives with neurosecretory processes linking the cardiaca-commissural organ or dorsal cardiac commissure (containig tritocerebral fibres) to the NCA I. the allatal commissure and the CA. Neurosecretory processes are exchanged between the two halves of the cephalic neuroendocrine complex (CNC) both intracerebrally at different locales, possibly to ensure functional synchrony of CNC components.NCA I and CACP are drawn out with their stroma to varying extents over the CA. Histophysiological evidence suggests that part of the stainable secretion stored in, and or in axonal transit through CA may be released through CA surface; NCA I, the nervi cardiostomatogastrici, CACP, perhaps also NCA II may function as neurohaemal areas. A “directed” neurosecretory pathway could be distinguished from PAP to the foregut and the fat body. The degree of spatial intimacy detected between neurosecretory and stomatogastric components of CNC suggests that the two systems may function in an integrated fashion. The recurrent-oesophageal nerve complex serves not only for a direct transport of neurosecretion, but also as one of the sites of its release.
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  • 228
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 153-165 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Fifteen catecholamine-containing cell groups and eight indoleamine-containing cell groups are present in the brain of the squirrel monkey. Most of the catecholamine-containing cell groups (12) are similar to catecholamine-containing cell groups previously described in the rat. However, three catecholamine-containing cell groups not previously noted are found in the squirrel monkey brain.The indoleamine-containing cell groups are found within, or adjacent to, the raphe nuclei. Differences between the localization of indoleamine-containing cell bodies in the brain of the rat and the squirrel monkey are minor.
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  • 229
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The olfactory epithelium of Necturus is approximately 300 μ thick, or two to three times the thickness seen in most other vertebrates. The epithelium contains three cell types, olfactory receptor cells, supporting cells and basal cells. The receptor cell population is made up of both non-ciliated and ciliated cells in a ratio varying from 1:1 to 2:1. The ciliated cell morphology is essentially similar to that of other vertebrates. The non-ciliated cells contain groups of centrioles located at various levels in the supranuclear cytoplasm and a fibrogranular complex similar to that seen in cells engaged in ciliogenesis. This variable morphology suggests a continuous turnover of olfactory cell population, or, at least, a continuous turnover of the dendritic portion of the cell. Alternatively it may indicate that there are two different receptor cell populations with different functions. The supporting cells in the olfactory epithelium contain a variable number of secretory granules. In the anterior part of the nasal sac there are relatively more cells with many granules whereas in the posterior region the supporting cell cytoplasm contains mostly smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Olfactory receptor axons are ensheathed in groups by basal cell cytoplasm before they leave the epithelium.
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  • 230
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The objective was to describe the cytological changes that occur in prolactin and luteinizing hormone (LH) cells of the rat hypophysis during pregnancy and lactation and to correlate these changes with secretory activity of the two cell types. The cells were demonstrated with immunohistochemistry and secretory activity was indicated by pituitary and serum hormone concentrations as measured by radioimmunoassay.During pregnancy, two forms of prolactin cells were observed in the pars distalis. One form (prolactin cell I) was small, polyhedral, and constituted most of the prolactin cell population. A second form (prolactin cell II) was found occasionally in pituitary glands of nonpregnant rats and became prominent during pregnancy. It was polyhedral, many times larger than prolactin cell I, and had a restricted distribution in the pars distalis. During gestation prolactin cells I exhibited little change in size, number and staining capacity. Similarly, pituitary and serum prolactin concentrations indicated that the hypophysis releases little prolactin during pregnancy, except for the first few days after conception and before parturition. During lactation, the staining intensity of prolactin cells I and the pituitary prolactin concentration varied little. Prolactin cells II were lightly stained and rare throughout lactation.The staining capacity of luteinizing hormone (LH-) cells increased as pregnancy progressed in parallel with a rising pituitary concentration of LH during the first half of pregnancy. However, the immunohistochemical procedure appeared to be too insensitive to reflect the gradual fall in pituitary LH concentration during late pregnancy. During early lactation, the reduced staining capacity of LH-cells was correlated with a low pituitary concentration.
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  • 231
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The effect of the pineal on circadian periodicity of plasma corticosterone in rats was studied. Male rats were pinealectomized, blinded, or pinealectomized and blinded, and exposed to a lighting cycle of 12 hr of light and 12 hr of darkness.The diurnal variation in plasma corticosterone in pinealectomized animals was not different from that found in intact controls. Blinded rats did not show normal steroid cyclicity. In contrast, rats that were both blinded and pinealectomized had a diurnal variation similar to that of the controls. The pineal gland, then, appears to contribute to the disturbed plasma corticosterone rhythm found in blinded rats.
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  • 232
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 431-435 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The glycogen concentration in the immature rat uterus was investigated at three-hour intervals over a 24-hour period. Control animals received injections of 0.1 ml of oil while 0.06 μg of 17β-estradiol was administered to experimental rats; the animals were sacrificed 24 hours later. Peak concentrations were observed at 9 a.m. for both control and experimental groups. The low value for controls appeared at 12 p.m. and for experimentals at 3 a.m. The difference between low and high points represented a 102% increase for controls and 59% for estradiol-treated rats. These data show that a circadian rhythm is present in the rat uterus and that the uterus of the immature rat responds differently to estrogen stimulation according to the time of day the hormone is given.
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  • 233
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The participation of Clara cells in the formation of alveolar surfactant and their general metabolism were studied in mice by quantitative autoradiography under electron microscopy after in vivo incorporation of four precursors: 3H-choline, 3H-leucine, 3H-acetate and 3H-galactose.Tritiated choline, a specific precursor of the dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine-active fraction of the surfactant, is not incorporated into Clara cells. In contrast, 3H-acetate is first incorporated actively into the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus of these cells and, subsequently, in its secretory granules. It is suggested that acetate follows the general metabolism of the cell and/or is transformed into cholesterol. Tritiated leucine is incorporated into the secretory granules, although part of it remains more permanently in the cells. Tritiated galactose is actively incorporated, passes through the Golgi apparatus and eventually appears in the secretory granules.These results suggest that the Clara cell does not synthetize the tensio-active fraction of the lining layer, as does pneumocyte II, but participates in the synthesis and secretion of proteins, glucides and possibly the cholesterol belonging to the hypophase.
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  • 234
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974) 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 235
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 27-45 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Osmication in an unbuffered aqueous solution of osmium tetroxide allows the forming face of the Golgi apparatus to be labeled in many cell types. This property was utilized to study the spatial configuration of this organelle by examining stereopairs of the same field taken at 1,000 KV after tilting a thick (1 to 7 μUm) section of - 7° or + 7° from the original (0°) position. When examined in 1 μm thick sections at magnifications ranging from 13,000 to 18,000 times, the osmic acid-impregnated element of the Golgi apparatus of ganglion nerve cells, Leydig cells or Sertoli cells takes the appearance of a single layered polygonal network of tubules. This network can only be seen at electron microscope magnifications and is referred to as the primary network or structure of the forming face of the Golgi apparatus. When 2 to 7 μm thick sections are examined under progressively lower magnifications, the details of the primary structure remain discernible but become less conspicuous. The osmiophilic portion of the Golgi apparatus now extends over large areas of the cytoplasm to form an extensive continuous structure. This structure which is in the range of visibility of the light microscope is referred to as the secondary network or structure of the forming face. In ganglion nerve cells, the secondary structure consists of a perinuclear network showing slender projections reaching the nucleus and wider expansions approaching the cell surface; in the Leydig cells it appears as an ovoid structure located at one pole of the nucleus whereas in Sertoli cells it forms a cylindrical structure located in the main shaft of the cytoplasm and extending from the nucleus towards the lumen of the seminiferous tubule. Thus the forming face of the Golgi apparatus displays a primary structure; the tubular roughly polygonal network, which is similar in the three cell types and a secondary structure which varies from cell to cell.
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  • 236
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 181-190 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: It is generally accepted that in the kidney insulin is metabolized in the proximal tubule, but whether in the convoluted segment, the straight segment, or both has not been established. By means of autoradiography counting of radioactivity, and interrupted flow techniques, the following observations have been made. 131I-labelled porcine insulin is metabolized exclusively in the convoluted segment of the proximal tubule. Although the glomerular filtrate is the major source of insulin supply to the renal epithelia, the peritubular capillary plexuses provide as much as 30% or more of the total insulin delivered to the renal epithelia. The epithelium of the convoluted segment is capable of sequestering 131I-insulin from the peritubular capillary plexuses, a phenomenon which has not been established previously.
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  • 237
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Vinblastine sulfate was given to adult rats by two tail-vein injections. After a total treatment time of five hours, kidney cortex was fixed and prepared for examination by routine transmission electron microscopy. Cells of proximal convoluted tubules from treated animals were found to contain focal aggregates of smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Such aggregates were not normally present in cells of control animals. The smooth membranes of these aggregates bear some resemblance to phenobarbital-induced proliferations of smooth endoplasmic reticulum described in liver cells by many previous investigators, and the suggestion is made that the aggregates described here may reflect a vinblastine-induced increase within proximal tubule cells of enzymes which function in drug metabolism. That molecules of vinblastine actually entered proximal tubule cells was evidenced by the fact that cytoplasmic microtubules were greatly reduced in number and paracrystals of microtubular protein were occasionally observed.
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  • 238
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 251-261 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Mapping of the peripheral specialized conducting system of the heart could contribute to an understanding of normal and abnormal impulse propagation. In this study, a sheep right anterior papillary muscle was sectioned serially and stained for Purkinje fibers with the periodic acid Schiff and hematoxylin procedure. The subendocardial Purkinje fibers entered the papillary muscle through its base and extended nearly to its apex. Except for one “mixed” fiber group, the subendocardial fibers did not connect to the deep Purkinje fibers, and both groups contained discontinuous Purkinje fibers. The fibers of the moderator band radiated in such a complex fashion that they could not be reconstructed exactly, but they generally disappeared in the ventricular wall through the base of the papillary muscle and false tendons. No direct connections between the subendocardial Purkinje fibers and those of the moderator band could be found within the boundaries of the papillary muscle, and this may form the basis for the relatively late activation of the papillary muscle as compared to the surrounding myocardial wall. The discontinuous fibers we observed are compatible with a current concept regarding the embryology of the ventricular specialized conducting system, and are not in conflict with normal impulse propagation.
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  • 239
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: This study is concerned with the passage of carbon particles through the sinusoidal lining cells of bone marrow and embryonic liver of the rat. A carbon suspension (Pelikan C11/1431A, Günther Wagner, Hanover) diluted 1:1 with double strength Tyrode solution, was administered through the aorta for the bone marrow studies and through the umbilical vein for observations on the embryonic liver. The carbon particles have a diameter ranging from 220 to 380 Å with a mean diameter of 280 Å. Within three minutes after the injection, the particulate was present in the extravascular spaces. Neither the sinusoidal walls of the bone marrow nor of the embryonic rat liver prior to 16 days gestation have preformed apertures. In both cases, the carbon particles enter the extravascular space through fenestrae with diaphragms. No carbon particles occur in the junctional spaces between the lining cells. The temporary pores caused by diapedetic blood cells maintain a tight seal and no particulate was observed leaving the vascular space at these sites. At 17 days of gestation, open gaps develop in the endothelial lining of the embryonic rat liver and particulate material leaves the vascular lumen through these openings. The presence of bristle-coated vesicles containing particulate material at the abluminal side of the lining cells is interpreted as a retrograde uptake by these phagocytic cells rather than as evidence for vesicular transmural transport.
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  • 240
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974) 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 241
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 317-328 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Between the 50th day of embryonic lifeStage 20 (O'Rahilly and Boyden, '73; Wells and Boyden, '54). and the 30th week of gestation no reconstructions of the developing parenchyma of the human lung seem to have been attempted. To bridge this long gap, only two techniques have been utilized hitherto: counting the generations of branches in the growing segments of the lung and analyzing the changing cytology with the aid of the electron microscope. At least two important objectives remain: a knowledge of when the respiratory units known as pulmonary acini appear and the order in which capillary invasion of its component parts takes place.At the 16th week of gestation, peripheral units have not attained their full complement of branches and their boundaries are not delimited. At 17 weeks, acini of varying sizes can be recognized as discrete terminal units at the periphery of the segmental trees, having attained their full, though underdeveloped, complement of fetal branches, as gauged by later counts of generations made at 30 weeks of age (Boyden, '69). The 17th is also the week in which capillaries first invade the peripheral branches of the acinus. Although significantly later stages have not yet been obtained, the evidence available (including that from unpublished work on monkey fetuses) strongly suggests that canalization (before birth), like alveolization (after birth)Boyden and Tompsett, '65; Boyden, '67. proceeds mainly in a centripetal direction.
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  • 242
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The response of the kidneys of 237 adult newts [Notophthalmus (Diemictylus) viridescens] to partial nephrectomy (15 to 30% of right kidney removed) and sub-total nephrectomy (70 to 90%) was studied histologically and autoradiographically to determine their regenerative potential. The response involved both hypertrophy and hyperplasia as indicated by increases in 3H-thymidine labelled nuclei and also 3H-leucine incorporation by the remaining cells of the kidney. Leucine incorporation increased within 24 hours and continued to increase until 5 days after partial nephrectomy (17% increase over control level) or 15 days after sub-total nephrectomy (36% increase). The number of thymidine labelled nuclei, however, did not increase for the first 5 days and then continued to increase up to 10 days after partial nephrectomy (to 3X control level) and 20 days after sub-total nephrectomy (to 5X control level).An accumulation of cells appeared on the cut surface of the kidney by 15 to 20 days after nephrectomy. It consisted of modified epithelial cells from the tubules and was characterized by marked basophilia. The number of 3H-thymidine labelled nuclei in the accumulation increased about 10 to 20 times over control levels at its peak on days 12 to 15; 3H-leucine incorporation doubled at its peak on days 10 to 15. Nevertheless, after day 20 the cell accumulation decreased in size due to cell resorption or sloughing or both; it had disappeared by day 50 with no new tissue resulting. The newt kidney does not appear to exhibit any regenerative potential and, therefore, it is similar to mammalian kidneys in this respect.
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  • 243
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Forty-eight chick embryos were killed at 9-16 days of incubation age. Tissue was obtained from the fourth or fifth cervical vertebra, immersed in Karnovsky's fluid, post-fixed in osmium tetroxide, dehydrated in ethanol, stained “en bloc” with uranyl acetate in ethanol, and embedded in Epon 812. Vertebrae were oriented for cross-sectional microtomy in cephalic to caudal sequence. Thin sections were stained with uranyl and lead salt solutions saturated with tribasic calcium triphosphate to prevent decalcification.Chondrocytes within the cartilaginous vertebral body occur in various stages of degeneration without orderly arrangement. Both reversible and irreversible stages are found at the cartilaginous resorption front. Electron-lucent osteoid and mineralization appear in the intercellular matrix at about 12.5 days. Rapidly invading blood vessels form a highly variable resorption front and irregular marrow cavity. Capillaries with accompanying cells border on the front, but else-where open capillaries allow blood elements to be in direct contact with cartilage. Chondroclasts are associated with small areas of calcified cartilage. At about 14 days trabeculae are formed at the resorption front by osteoblasts which deposit bone osteoid on uncalcified cartilaginous matrix. The matrix is eroded away. A free trabecula of bone without a core of calcified cartilaginous matrix remains.Basic differences between developmental growth processes in the epiphyseal plate and vertebral body may stem from the large amount of uncalcified cartilaginous matrix at the latter's resorption front.
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  • 244
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 533-549 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Special lamellated bodies, 400 to 700 Å in diameter, are observed in the adepidermal space at the epidermal-dermal junction of the skin of the frog tadpole, Rana rugosa. Each stained lamella is about 20 Å thick and separated from adjacent lamellae by spacings of 20 to 30 Å. The lamellated bodies are demonstrated in specimens prepared with phosphotungstic acid (PTA)-containing fixatives, but are not revealed in specimens fixed with ordinary aldehyde fixatives which lack PTA. They are sometimes observed within the cytoplasm of basal epidermal cells, suggesting their epidermal origin. Far less frequently, comparable structures are present outside the sarcolemma of skeletal muscle fibers. Three kinds of anchoring structures are observed at the epidermal-dermal junction: anchoring filaments, anchoring fibrils, and anchoring fibers. The anchoring filaments are observed in the adepidermal space connecting hemidesmosomes to the basal lamina. They are 200 to 230 Å in diameter and have no banding pattern. Anchoring fibrils, 210 to 250 Å thick and unbanded, are present in the upper one-third of the collagenous lamellae. Fibrils do not have a banding pattern. Direct continuity between anchoring fibrils and anchoring filaments is suggested. Anchoring fibers, about 170 mμ, thick, occur less frequently. They are composed of laterally aggregated finer fibrils which show no clear bandings. Their distal ends join with the basal lamina and they extend proximally deep into the collagenous lamellae.
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  • 245
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 583-588 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Using an immunoperoxidase technique at the ultrastructural level, vasopressin was localized in the axons of both the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei, in the internal zone of the median eminence and the posterior pituitary but not in the perikarya of the neurosecretory neurons. A complete absence of histochemical reaction was found in the hypothalamo-neurohypophyseal tract of the rat with hereditary hypothalamic diabetes insipidus (Brattleboro strain).
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  • 246
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 95-121 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Fine structural observations on the corpus luteum of late pregnancy in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) are described. Ovariectomy was performed between 141 and 146 days of pregnancy. Granulosa lutein cells measured 25 to 30 μ and were supplied by fenestrated capillaries. The plasma membranes of neighboring cells formed intercellular canaliculi which were bordered by microvilli. The nuclei were large and contained a nucleolus and peripheral heterochromatin. The central region of the cytoplasm contained a high concentration of: (1) rod-shaped mitochondria with tubular cristae and some electron-opaque inclusions in their matrices, (2) elaborate Golgi complexes and associated large tubular cisternae, and (3) tubular as well as cisternal agranular endoplasmic reticulum. The more peripheral region of the cytoplasm was filled with: (1) well developed parallel arrays of granular endoplasmic reticulum, (2) bundles of 50 Å filaments with dense areas, and (3) dispersed lipid droplets. Membrane-bound granules of various types were observed in most cells. Large lacunae were present in the cytoplasm which were not confluent with the intercellular canaliculi or the perivascular spaces. Microvilli projected into the empty-appearing lumen of the lacunae. It was concluded that the morphological features of the granulosa lutein cells of late pregnancy were consistent with those considered to be necessary for steroidogenic function.
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  • 247
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 248
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 147-152 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: In spindles of rat muscles, the particular class of intrafusal fiber that is unreactive over its entire striated length when incubated for alkali-stable “myofibrillar” ATPase, exhibits pronounced regional differences in staining following incubation for acid-stable ATPase. This variation along the contractile polar regions of the fiber can easily lead to misinterpretations of intrafusal fiber type, as well as the erroneous suggestion of two distinct populations of muscle spindles. Furthermore, such regional staining differences are strongly suggestive of variations in the contractile apparatus along certain intrafusal muscle fibers.
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  • 249
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 269-284 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The systemic arterial pattern of the guinea pig was studied to determine the arrangement of the major arterial trunks and their branches. Fifty-nine specimens were examined by dissection, angiography, and corrosion casting. The arterial arrangement was found to resemble a typical mammalian pattern, although some exceptions were noted. For example, the internal carotid arteries were small and of questionable significance in the cerebral blood supply. Instead, a major portion of the blood supply to the brain appeared to be provided by the internal ophthalmic arteries. In the thoracic region, large dorsal scapular arteries originated and were distributed in part to the large fat pad in the dorsal cervical region. Also, each vertebral artery arose as two separate rami that anastomosed a few millimeters from their origin. The arterial pattern of the thoracic limb presented no unusual features.
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  • 250
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Human thyroid glands obtained within 2.5 hours of death were examined for the presence and distribution of calcitonin-containing cells using horseradish peroxidase as an indicator in an indirect immunohistochemical procedure. The glands were cut into 10 to 20 transverse slices per lobe and fixed in glutaraldehyde. A representative section of each paraffin-embedded slice was processed and systematically scanned for calcitonin-containing cells. Of 13 glands examined, ten contained calcitonin cells. The cells were found mostly in the follicular epithelium both singly and in groups. They were most numerous in the central region of each lobe of the gland. The isthmus and poles were devoid of calcitonin cells and only occasionally were these cells found at the surface. Parathyroid glands were examined by the same procedure for the presence of calcitonin cells but none were observed. These results demonstrate that calcitonin-containing cells are found regularly in human thyroid glands and that the distribution of these cells is centered in the central region of each lobe of the gland.
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  • 251
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 191-199 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Bronchiolar neuro-epithelial bodies in neonatal mice were studied by light and electron microscopy. These bodies occurred in thickened areas of the epithelium, and consisted of groups of specialized, non-ciliated columnar epithelial cells with many cytoplasmic granules. These cells were usually closely parallel to one another and had elongated nuclei containing conspicuous peripheral chromatin condensations. These cells were associated with intra-epithelial axons.With electron microscopy, the non-myelinated axon under the neuro-epithelial body was observed to penetrate the basal lamina and enter the epithelial layer. After penetration, the intra-epithelial axon containing numerous mitochondria lost its Schwann cell sheath, became enlarged, and ramified among the epithelial cells.These innervated neuro-epithelial bodies probably function as sensory receptors in the bronchioles.
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  • 252
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Perivertebral cervical connective tissue was taken from chick embryos of incubation ages from 72 hours through hatching and from 4, 8, 12, and 16 week old chicks. Preparations for electron microscopy were routine except for en bloc staining with 5% aqueous uranyl acetate. Collagenase digestions of thin sections confirmed the presence of tropocollagen in banded extracellular fibrils.Banding becomes demonstrable in fibrils at about seven days but repeating units cannot be measured. Close to connective tissue cells the banded material is present in wide sheets. Partially banded fibrils (250 Å wide) physically related to microfibrils are present in acellular regions. Growth in fibril diameter is slow through the second week (up to 300 Å) but increases nearly 200 Å on days 14 and 15. Fibrils larger than 500 Å resist uranium and lead staining following the period of accelerated growth. Smaller fibrils (〈 500 Å) continue to stain well. A basic banding pattern of measurable periodicity is established by the eighth day. This consists of a major doublet, two minor doublets, and two singlets. The intraperiod distance does not change significantly with growth (510 Å average). Additional bands near the first minor doublet and singlets of the basic pattern are first clearly demonstrable at 14 and 15 days. Ambiguities in banding and period length are believed to be due to plane of section, interference with detail by other fibrils and flaky amorphous material or possibly to differential shrinkage along the length of a single fibril.
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  • 253
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Horseradish peroxidase was used to explore electron microscopically the uptake and transport of protein by the rat visceral yolk sac at 2 minutes, 6 hours, and 12 hours following a single intravenous injection into pregnant rats on day 12 and day 21.5 of gestation.On both days, the visceral endoderm absorbed peroxidase via micropinocytosis at 2 min postinjection, but not at the 6 and 12 hr intervals. At the latter two postinjection intervals on day 12, peroxidase was localized mainly at two sites, i.e., within intraepithelial supranuclear storage vacuoles, and within the vitelline endothelium deep to the visceral endoderm. On day 21.5 at 6 and 12 hr postinjection, peroxidase was localized in supranuclear storage vacuoles, though most of it was within tubular structures and small vacuoles in the paranuclear and infranuclear cytoplasm of the endoderm. Many dense vacuoles were in close anatomical relationship with the basal cell membrane. Deep to the endoderm a few macrophages were actively engulfing peroxidase, but reaction product was rarely found in the fenestrated vitelline endothelium.The results presented differ from the previous physiological and anatomical transport studies of the visceral yolk sac in that protein (peroxidase) transport was observed deep to the endoderm during both mid- and late gestation.
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  • 254
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 299-337 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Hepatic glycogen patterns are described for rats adapted to a precisely controlled feeding schedule and ad libitum fed rats. Liver samples were processed for biochemical and histochemical glycogen analysis at precise intervals following a 22 hour fast and a 2 hour meal. Histochemical determination of glycogen (PAS) after freeze substitution showed lobular patterns of hepatic glycogen which correlate with chemically determined glycogen levels and nutritional states of the rats. After 22 hour fasting, hepatocytes from rats with low glycogen levels (〈 0.09%) exhibited no significant staining. In control fed rats, feeding caused glycogen deposition throughout the lobule but in greatest concentration centrilobularly throughout the early phases of glycogen accumulation. As glycogen deposition continued, periportal lobular patterns were observed in rats with high glycogen levels (〉 5%). Glycogen depletion reduced glycogen staining in cells throughout the lobule, but centrilobular patterns prevailed until late in depletion when periportal patterns appeared. Ad libitum-fed rats showed similar glycogen patterns except maximum deposition was characterized by centrilobular or even lobular distribution of glycogen, and periportal patterns of glycogen were seen only rarely in extreme fasted rats. Differences in lobular patterns between ad libitum and control fed rats is apparently related to lower maximum hepatic glycogen levels reached by ad libitum-fed animals.
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  • 255
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 383-403 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Incubation of human oral mucosa in physiological solutions containing proteolytic enzymes permits separation of the preparation into its epithelial and connective tissue components. Trypsin, collagenase and elastase were utilized to effect epithelium-connective tissue separation. Elastase was the most suitable in that a reliable separation of the epithelium from the connective tissue occurred at the lamina lucida (the electron-lucent zone between the basal cell and basal lamina) with only minimal alteration of the epithelium. The most common change observed in separated epithelium was the formation of cytoplasmic protrusions or blebs on the inferior surface of the epithelial basal cell. Bleb formation was quite extensive when preparations were incubated one to two hours beyond the point where the epithelium could be separated from the connective tissue. With prolonged incubations inferior aspects of epithelial basal cells demonstrated the formation of an entirely new cytoplasmic front apparently resulting from fusion of membranes and subsequent confluence of the cytoplasm contained within the blebs. Individual hemidesmosomes or small lengths of the original inferior epithelial basal cell membrane became enclosed in membrane-bound vacuoles within the cytoplasm of the epithelial basal cell. These vacuoles were shown to have been interiorized by the absence of a ruthenium red reaction product within the vacuolar spaces. Bleb formation was shown to be strictly enzyme-induced since intact specimens demonstrated extensive basal cell blebbing following prolonged incubation. Occasional desmosomes were broken and the component halves interiorized in membrane-bound vacuoles within the cell cytoplasm. Alterations observed in epithelial basal cells as a consequence of exposure to exogenous proteolytic enzymes mimic alterations observed in many disease processes and during certain stages of development.
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  • 256
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 41-71 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The morphogenetic events of erythroid differentiation in guinea pig bone marrow were studied by electron microscopy. The diaminobenzidine (DAB) reaction and radioautographic detection of Fe55 incorporation permitted a more objective identification of erythroid cells than was possible in previous studies. With the combined use of these two methods morphological events of cell maturation could be correlated reliably with cytoplasmic hemoglobin content, thus providing a basis for the description of various maturation stages.The oxidation of DAB by hemoglobin coupled with OsO4 treatment results in a generalized increase in cytoplasmic electron opacity proportional to the amount of hemoglobin present. Measurements of cytoplasmic density were carried out on electron microscopic negatives of DAB-reacted specimens that were not stained otherwise. Only those cells were regarded as erythroblasts in which the cytoplasm was at least twice as dense as in recognizable, differentiated, non-erythroid cells, using reticular cell cytoplasm in each specimen as the base line for the comparisons.In bone marrow cells, iron incorporation occurred overwhelmingly for hemoglobin synthesis. In normal marrow, blast cells which incorporated iron but did not contain hemoglobin in detectable amounts were defined as Stage I erythroid cells. They were morphologically of the same type as erythroblasts with the minimum amount of detectable hemoglobin (Stage II). Cells in maturation stages of progressively increasing hemoglobin content were assigned to Stages III to V. Stage III erythroblasts correspond morphologically to proerythroblasts of light microscopic preparations. The DAB reaction in them was obvious without densitometric measurements but remained mottled.The morphological characteristics of each of the maturation stages are described with particular emphasis on the earliest erythroid cells, since the methods employed permit their identification with greater degrees of discrimination and objectivity than is possible with the light microscope or with conventional methods of electron microscopy.The DAB reaction was positive in the heterochromatin in Stages III and IV but it was negative in the pyknotic chromatin of erythroblasts in Stage V of maturation. The predominantly extended chromatin and also the large and complex nucleoli of earlier cells began to condense during Stage IV. Silver grains due to Fe55 disintegration were observed over the nuclei of erythroblasts in all maturational stages.The perinuclear cisterna was DAB-negative and it became wider as maturation progressed. It was bridged in places by DAB-negative material connecting the cytoplasm to euchromatic areas of the nucleus. DAB-positive substance was not seen in nuclear pores at any stage of maturation. At the time of extrusion, nuclei did not contain DAB-positive material but were occasionally labeled with Fe55.
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  • 257
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Parenchymal perfusions of rat pineal glands with India ink solutions reveal an extravascular and intercellular system of continuous microscopic channels containing ink perfusate. This system has two, apparently interconnecting, components: pericapillary sleeves or networks, and intralobular canaliculi 0.2-0.4 μ in diameter and enmeshing the pinealocytes individually.Perfusion of the canaliculi was reduced or inhibited by either partial dehydration or exposure to hypertonic solutions, and was blocked when the perfusate contained either CaCl2 or trypsin. Hyaluronidase was without effect. The extent to which the canaliculi could be perfused followed a 24-hour-rhythm with a peak (mean maximal canalicular perfusion distance = 95 μ) near the end of the daily environmental light phase, and a trough (mean maximal canalicular perfusion distance = 13 μ) during the dark phase. This rhythm resembles that in rat pineal content of 5-hydroxytryptamine. Dark-phase perfusion distances equivalent to those of the light-phase were obtained when 5-hydroxytryptamine (5 × 10-3 M) was present in the perfusate. In similar circumstances norepinephrine, heparin and melatonin were without effect.It is suggested that this system of canaliculi may be significant for transport activities between pinealocytes and capillaries and that its circadian and local patency may be regulated in part by release of 5-hydroxytryptamine by the pinealocytes, and in part by calcium ions.
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  • 258
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The purpose of this study was to ascertain the effects of different amounts of progesterone on estrogen-induced DNA synthesis in the vaginal and lower cervical epithelia of the rat. Ovariectomized rats were injected subcutaneously with 1 μg of estradiol-17β dipropionate or with estradiol and 1, 5, 10 or 15 mg of progesterone for three days; control rats received oil. Tritiated thymidine was injected one hour prior to necropsy; the tissues were processed for autoradiographic study and the percentages of labeled nuclei in the basal layer from the lower half of both the vagina and cervix were determined. In the group of rats given estradiol and 1 mg of progesterone the thymidine uptake in the vagina was significantly increased over that of rats given only estrogen. However, in the rats treated with estradiol and 5, 10 or 15 mg of progesterone, the extent of DNA replication in the basal epithelial nuclei was similar to the estrogen group. These responses were compared with those of the basal epithelium from the lower half of the cervix. None of the estrogen-progesterone treatments increased the thymidine index in the cervical epithelium above that of estrogen alone; additionally, 5, 10 or 15 mg of progesterone given with estrogen suppressed DNA replication. These data indicate that stratified epithelia of these two portions of the reproductive tract respond differently to exogenous ovarian hormones.
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  • 259
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Lumbar spinal ganglia, L2,3,4 were ablated in four cats to determine the distribution of degenerating lumbar afferents in the urinary bladder. Bladders were collected at 7, 14, 21 and 35 days following ganglionectomy. Six regions of the urinary bladder were sampled bilaterally and examined ultrastructurally in each cat. Overall, 3,033 terminal axons were counted, of which 2.6% were degenerating; of these, 9% had synaptic vesicles and were interpreted as efferent axons of postganglionic neurons with cell bodies in spinal ganglia. Lumbar afferents were most numerous in the trigone region, followed next by the ventral neck region; regions cranial to the ureters had similar small populations of lumbar afferents. A similar distribution pattern was observed for terminal axons containing granular synaptic vesicles. The relative concentration of lumbar innervation caudal to the ureters seems to account for the increased density of terminal axons observed in this region. Lumbar afferents were distributed bilaterally to the bladder and were numerically similar within and outside muscle fascicles. Ultrastructural evidence supports the position that bladder receptors are free nerve endings except for sparse Pacinian corpuscles.
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  • 260
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974) 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 261
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 449-481 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Histochemical, x-ray analytical and scanning and transmission electron microscopical procedures have been utilized to determine the chemical nature, physical appearance and attachments of the tectorial membrane in normal rats and to correlate these results with biochemical data on protein-carbohydrate complexes. Additionally, pertinent histochemical and ultrastructural findings in chemically sympathectomized rats are considered. The results indicate that the tectorial membrane is a viscous, complex, colloid of glycoprotein(s) possessing some oriented molecules and an ionic composition different from either endolymph or perilymph. It is attached to the reticular laminar surface of the organ of Corti and to the tips of the outer hair cells; it is attached to and enclose the hairs of the inner hair cells. A fluid compartment may exist within the limbs of the “W” formed by the hairs on each outer hair cell surface. Present biochemical concepts of viscous glycoproteins suggest that they are polyelectrolytes interacting physically to form complex networks. They possess characteristics making them important in fluid and ion transport. Furthermore, the macromolecular configuration assumed by such polyelectrolytes is unstable and subject to change from stress or shifts in pH or ions. Thus, the attachments of the tectorial membrane to the hair cells may play an important role in the transduction process at the molecular level.
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  • 262
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 567-574 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Sites of synaptic transmission between receptor cells and afferent nerves in electroreceptors of elasmobranchs are distinguished by a dense presynaptic ribbon surrounded by synaptic vesicles. Digestion by pronase or protease of thin sections of Epon embedded tissue selectively removes the presynaptic ribbon without affecting other synaptic structures. Presynaptic ribbons are composed in part of protein which differs significantly from other components of the synaptic complex.
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  • 263
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Ovaries of weanling and juvenile rats were studied by electron microscopic and cytochemical techniques, with particular reference to the role of the Golgi complex in the formation of the zona pellucida. The zona pellucida type of material first appears in the perivitelline space at the stage when the oocyte acquires a single layer of flattened and cuboidal granulosa cells, and is completely formed when the granulosa cells attain a cuboidal shape. The intimate association of the Golgi complex with the oocyte plasmalemma and the presence of mucopolysaccharide in its saccules and vesicles suggests that the Golgi complex of the oocyte plays an important role in the synthesis of the zona pellucida. The zona pellucida of the rat egg consists of a single layer of acid mucopolysaccharide which is structurally distinguishable from the liquor folliculi. Formation of the primary liquor folliculi is attributed to the Golgi complexes in granulosa cells.
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  • 264
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 47-56 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The coronary arteries and veins are described in the phalanger (Trichosurus vulpecula), an Australian marsupial, after study of 16 hearts. Several hearts were prepared by injection of the vessels with either latex or vinyl plastic.The distributing branches of both coronary arteries are within the myocardium and are not visible on the surface of the heart. The right coronary artery arises in typical fashion and supplies the non-septal wall of the right ventricle almost entirely, the dorsal half of the interventricular septum, the dorsal part of the non-septal wall of the left ventricle and part of the right artium and its ventral auricle. The left coronary artery also arises typically and supplies the greater part of the non-septal wall of the left ventricle, the ventral part of the interventricular septum, part of the infundibulum, the left atrium and part of the right atrium. At its origin it is larger than the right coronary artery. The ventral and dorsal septal arteries have an unusual course lying in the subendocardial tissue of the right ventricle. It is believed that arteries in this position have not been described previously.The great cardiac vein opens directly into the right atrium. A typical coronary sinus is present but formed only from veins draining the dorsal aspect of the heart.It is concluded that the coronary circulation in T. vulpecula closely resembles that of the avian heart and is unlike both the monotreme and placental mammalian patterns.
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  • 265
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 117-127 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Embryos from timed matings were studied at days 12-24 of gestation with respect to crown-rump length and external appearance. A linear increase in length was observed from the twelfth (2.5 mm) to the twenty-fourth (27.7 mm) day with the largest increases occurring between days 20 and 21 (3.8 mm) and days 22 and 23 (4.2 mm). The smallest daily increases were observed between days 15 and 16 (1.01 mm) and days 21 and 22 (1.03 mm), while the average daily increment for the remaining days was between 1.5 mm and 2.5 mm. Major changes in external appearance occurred on days 13, 14, 17 and 20 of gestation. Those features which could be observed externally were described for each of the days during the period studied. Late prenatal development in the gerbil resembles that of other myomorph rodents but proceeds at a slower rate than in other species such as the mouse or hamster. This slower rate of development may be of value when precise timing of drug administration and recovery of embryos is necessary.
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  • 266
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: This study is concerned with the finding of cytoplasmic annulate lamellae in normally developing avian somatic tissues. Annulate lamellae were observed in hepatic parenchymal and pancreatic beta cells of the chick embryo on days five and eleven, respectively, of egg incubation. The presence of this cytoplasmic membrane system in normal embryonic tissues supports the view that annulate lamellae may represent normally occurring, transitory organelles common to virtually all cells during early embryonic differentiation.
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  • 267
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Morphological changes in the acrosomic system and nuclei of developing spermatids were evaluated as a basis for classifying the stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium in the bovine testis. Light microscopic examination of periodic acid-Schiff-stained testicular tissue permitted identification of 14 steps of spermatid development (spermiogenesis). The first 12 steps in this sequence were utilized as the major criterion to divide the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium into 12 distinct stages. Following this, the pattern of germ cell differentiation was investigated by counting the number of germ cells at each stage of the cycle. Based on cell counts, type A spermatogonia divided primarily during stages VII-VIII and IX-X of the cycle. Some type A cells divided again at the end of stage XII to produce intermediate spermatogonia, while others apparently remained “dormant” until the following cycle. At the end of stage IV, intermediate spermatogonia divided to produce type B1 spermatogonia which in turn divided at the end of stage V to produce type B2 spermatogonia. Primary spermatocytes appeared during stage VIII and divided late in stage XI of the following cycle to form secondary spermatocytes. These divided to form young spermatids at the end of stage XII. It was concluded that changes in the acrosomic system and nuclear morphology of developing spermatids provide useful criteria for dividing the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium into stages as well as investigating the pattern of germ cell development during spermatogenesis in the bovine testis.
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  • 268
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 263-279 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Adult male rats received 5 mg methotrexate daily and were sacrificed 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5 and 3 days after the beginning of the treatment. Other groups received 9,000 rads of abdominal x-radiation and were sacrificed 1, 2 and 3 days later. Histological samples were taken from five regions of the small intestine and processed for light microscopic examination. Average area occupied by the crypts and the villi respectively, was measured per unit length of histological section. A few animals received 3H-thymidine an hour before the methotrexate treatment or irradiation; the histological samples were processed for radioautography.Significant mitotic activity was absent throughout the experiments. During the first 1.5 days, mainly the crypts diminished. Radioautography revealed that migration of crypt cells to the villi continued during this time. During the second and third days, the villi also showed marked diminution, and cell migration became irregular. In general, the histometric data were similar after methotrexate and irradiation. Epithelial denudation started in terminal ileum on the third day after methotrexate. The epithelium was much reduced but not yet denuding at this time in the irradiated animals.Methotrexate inhibition of DNA and RNA synthesis was assumed to be associated, respectively, with mitotic inhibition and with a decline of protein synthesis which manifested itself in villus diminution. Survival of epithelial cells varied presumably according to the amount of RNA pool and was longest in cells being in the S-phase at the onset of the treatment. The similarity of the data after irradiation implied a similar sequence of events.
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  • 269
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Early development of the bat, Glossophaga soricina, was investigated histologically using 71 pregnant animals removed from a laboratory colony at timed intervals after mating.Implantation was initiated between days 12 and 14 post-coitum, i.e., shortly after entrance of the blastocyst into the simplex uterus. The site of implantation was a narrow, tubular segment, the intramural uterine cornu, interposed between the end of the oviduct and the main uterine cavity. The intramural uterine cornu is probably homologous to the cranial end of a horn in a bicornuate uterus. Attachment of the blastocyst was central and circumferential, and orientation of the inner cell mass was cephalad in line with the long axis of the cornu. Implantation was secondarily interstitial in the fundal endometrium, as the lumen of the intramural uterine cornu was obliterated and the decidua filled in around the expanding blastocyst.The yolk sac was formed between days 15 and 24 by the expansion and coalescence of pockets within a meshwork of endoderm. Endoderm completely surrounded the inner cell mass until the onset of amniogenesis and served to suspend the inner cell mass from the cytotrophoblast. A decidual reaction first appeared on day 15 after trophoblastic penetration to the endometrial stroma. Syncytiotrophoblast developed as engulfment of maternal capillaries began on day 16, and the capillary endothelium was rapidly disrupted. Amniogenesis occurred by cavitation, beginning on day 26, and shield formation was complete in some animals by day 32.
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  • 270
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 37-48 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: In hamsters hypophysectomized on day 1 of the cycle (morning of ovulation) on days 1-28 post-hypophysectomy 99% of follicular development is limited to small and medium sized follicles with no more than five layers of granulosal cells. Since the largest preantral follicles on day 1 of the cycle have 10-12 layers of granulosal cells, it is evident that follicles become dependent on gonadotropins at an early stage of their maturation.The daily injection of 200 μg ovine follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) on days 8-11 post-hypophysectomy results in large antral follicles; when 10 μg ovine luteinizing hormone (LH) is then injected the animals ovulate 32 eggs. When 200 μg FSH on day 8 post-hypophysectomy is followed by 50 μg FSH on days 9-11, injecting LH results in the ovulation of nine eggs  -  comparable to the ovulation rate of intact hamsters. These experiments indicate that superovulation depends on sustained high levels of FSH whereas the ovulation of a normal number of eggs requires an initially high level of FSH and then much lower maintenance levels.When replacement therapy with 200 μg FSH for four days is started on the day of hypophysectomy (day 1) or day 2, follicles fail to develop past the six-seven granulosal layer stage. However, deferring the initial injection of FSH until day 3 results in antral follicles that are ovulated by LH (ovulation = 36 eggs). This suggests that functional corpora lutea inhibit the effects of FSH on follicular growth. Progesterone administered to hypophysectomized hamsters (days 8-11 post-hypophysectomy) increases the percentage of medium follicles at the expense of smaller stages. Progesterone injected daily along with FSH also prevents follicular development past the six-seven granulosal layer stage in 14 of 24 hypophysectomized animals.
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  • 271
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 135-140 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Paracrystalline aggregates of microtubules were observed by electron microscopy in some cells of the anterior pituitary glands from ten untreated chinchillas (Chinchilla laniger). Longitudinal section of the paracrystals revealed regular arrays of electron-opaque lines parallel to the long axis of the microtubules and in transverse sections the paracrystals showed an unusual checkerboard pattern of closely packed microtubules. However, the inner wall of each subunit was hexagonal in shape.
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  • 272
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 285-291 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Electron microscopic studies have revealed the presence of both dyads and triads in the accessory muscle of the walking leg of the horseshoe crab Tachypleus gigas. The dyads and triads are present in approximately equal numbers. The evolutionary significance of the coexistence of dyads and triads in such an ancient animal is discussed.
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  • 273
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 274
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Intravascular macrophages were found commonly in sections of calf lung capillaries. These cells were large with many pseudopodia of various sizes. The cell membrane was covered with an electron-opaque coat which remains between adjacent pseudopodial walls and results in structures suggesting “micropinocytosis vermiformis.” The cytoplasm of the macrophage was electron-lucent and contained endoplasmic reticulum, numerous mitochondria, free ribosomes, Golgi zones, dense bodies and vesicles of many sizes. These macrophages showed phagocytic activity. During erythrophagocytosis, a dense layer initially appeared at the red blood cell periphery. This layer moved toward the center together with the erythrocyte membrane as phagocytosis progressed. Simultaneously, the electron opacity of the red blood cell decreased until the cell was completely dispersed within the macrophage. This erythrophagocytosis occurred relatively seldom. The possibility that intravascular macrophages are the pre-cursors of alveolar macrophages is discussed.
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  • 275
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 335-351 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Differences in the ultrastructure of basophils in the bone marrow reflect transition from early to late stages of cell development. Mast cells in the trachea, stomach and duodenum lack such developmental changes, but one cell encountered in mitosis indicates a low rate of replication by apparently mature cells. Mast cells differ from basophils in shape and in the structure, shape, and position of the nucleus. The Golgi complex clearly participates in granulogenesis in early basophils but not in late basophils or mast cells, and in mast cells appears associated with rough coated vesicles and mitochondria. In basophils precursor granules mature into a homogeneous granules population. The more numerous, smaller, rounder, granules of the mast cells differ also in varying widely in structure and not evidencing a clear maturational sequence. Increased density of mast cell granules apparently correlates with decreased size and increased indentation by a lucent focus and with the presence of lucent vacuoles in the cytoplasm. Laminated, crystal-like foci replacing the thread-like component in the periphery of some granules appear rigid and resist the indentation deforming the granule elsewhere. Mast cells of the adult differ from those of fetal guinea pigs in lacking the concentric lamination and having more dense granules. Many mast cells reveal several small, dense bodies which apparently constitute a second granule type, and often occupy the lucent indentation of the large granule.
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  • 276
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: No significant differences in oxyhemoglobin affinity, or electrophoretic patterns of hemoglobin were found in 18 bull sharks collected in selected regions of Lake Nicaragua, the Rio San Juan, and the Caribbean Sea. The half-saturation of hemoglobin with oxygen (P50) was 11 and 17 mm Hg at pH 7.4 and 6.8, respectively (25° C, 3% hemoglobin solution, potassium phosphate buffer, 0.3 ionic strength). Electrophoresis resolved the hemoglobin into a minor and a major band. Planimetry of densitometric recordings showed that the major band constituted 54% of the total hemoglobin; the minor band, 46%. On the basis of these hemoglobin studies, no subspeciation of bull sharks in Lake Nicaragua was identified, although marine bull sharks have free access to the lake and have been there, at least, since 1535; the synonymy of Carcharhinus nicaraguensis with C. leucas was confirmed.
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  • 277
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Retinal photoreceptor degeneration was induced by exposing albino rats to fluorescent illumination at elevated environmental temperatures. Fine carbon particles were injected intravenously or directly into the vitreous body or anterior chamber of the eye. The resulting pattern of invasion, migration, and egression of carbon-filled phagocytes in eyes with degenerated retinas was reconstructed from a time sequence series of light and electron microscopic tissue sections. Retinal debris, such as damaged photoreceptor outer segments and carbon particles, was most frequently removed by two populations of cells possessing phagocytic properties: mononuclear cells of vascular origin and pigment epithelial cells. After retinal damage, mononuclear cells appeared first in the vitreous body and later, in time sequence, progressively deeper in the inner plexiform layer and out to the bipolar nuclear layer, where they were seen within, or partially within, retinal capillaries. After intravenous carbon injection, however, marked phagocytes were not seen in the retina. Carbon-filled phagocytic cells were observed in the choroidal connective tissue and blood vessels after intravenous injection, but not after intravitreal injections of carbon. Therefore, retinal phagocytes did not appear to leave the eye through the choroidal circulation. Pigment epithelial cells proliferated by mitotic activity, occurred as single cells separated from Bruch's membrane, and were seen among the degenerated outer segments. After direct exposure to carbon particles, pigment cell phagosomes contained both carbon and lamellated discs of degenerated outer segments. Whether these cells exited from the eye through retinal capillaries or returned to Bruch's membrane to reestablish continuity in the pigment epithelium could not be determined.
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  • 278
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The monkey testis contains an axial rete in a highly vascular central core of loose connective tissue. Seminiferous tubules join the rete along its entire length. The short terminal segments of the tubules are lined mainly by Sertoli cells. There is then a transition from Sertoli cell epithelium to the simple cuboidal epithelium of tubuli recti, which connect the seminiferous tubules to the rete testis.Electron microscopic observations of the Sertoli cell in the terminal regions of the seminiferous tubules reveal a highly lobulated nucleus, a unique nucleolus and a columnar cell body with an irregular free surface bearing processes of varied form projecting into the tubule lumen. The cytoplasm is characterized by a well developed rough endoplasmic reticulum, large numbers of lipid droplets, and an extraordinary abundance of 70 Å filaments. Occasionally these latter are so densely packed that other organelles are excluded from large areas of the cytoplasm. Profiles of smooth endoplasmic reticulum are few in marked contrast to the usual condition of Sertoli cells elsewhere in the seminiferous tubules.Many of the Sertoli cells in the terminal regions of the seminiferous tubules contain spermatozoa in various stages of degradation. Small lymphocytes, never observed in normal seminiferous tubules, are distributed in small numbers among the Sertoli cells of the transitional zone. No desmosomes or other junctional specializations are observed at the interface of lymphocytes with the surrounding Sertoli cells. The cytology of the terminal region of the seminiferous tubules is discussed in relationship to exit of sperm from the tubules, the blood-testis barrier, and the pathogenesis of immune orchitis.
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  • 279
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 81-115 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Scanning electron microscopy was used to study the ultrastructural morphology of the nephron. Material for observation was taken from rat kidneys which were fixed by vascular perfusion. Different techniques for splitting open the kidney, combined with stereoscopic viewing, provided many instructive views of nephron morphology. In addition, scanning electron microscopy revealed a number of new features including (1) the complex organization and structure of kidney podocytes; (2) the distribution of endothelial pores and the presence of endothelial microprojections and branching endothelial thickenings; and (3) the presence, distribution and morphology of microprojections and cilia on the luminal surfaces of Bowman's capsule and the uriniferous tubules.
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  • 280
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    Notes: The ultrastructure of a specialized encapsulated nerve ending located in the papillary layer of rat gingiva is described. The axon in the corpuscular ending possesses microvesicles and microtubules, and is surrounded by laminar cells (with basement membrane) and capsular cells (modified fibroblasts, no basement membrane).
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  • 282
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 145-145 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 283
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Light and electron microscope examination of gastro-intestinal epithelia in the adult mouse revealed the widespread presence of a cell type characterized by deep surface invaginations or “caveolae” and, accordingly, called “caveolated cell.”The caveolated cells are scattered within the epithelia of stomach, small and large intestine; they have a narrow apex bordering the lumen and a wide base in contact with the basement membrane. In the light microscope, they display microvilli longer than in nearby cells; the cytoplasm is usually pale and contains an apical group of parallel fibrils, next to which are minute light spaces which may correspond to the caveolae. In the electron microscope, each fibril is found to be composed of a bundle of straight filaments, extending from the core of a microvillus down into the deeper portion of the supranuclear region; microtubules are often associated with these filaments. Filaments of a different type are arranged in bundles which go from desmosome to desmosome around the apical region of the cell. The caveolae are long and tortuous channels opening at the cell surface between the microvilli and extending deep into the cytoplasm. From the walls of caveolae, polyp-like structures project into the lumen. The heads of the polyps are believed to be released into this lumen where they appear as small spheres. These in turn may come out of the caveolae to appear between and next to the microvilli.Caveolated cells are not numerous, e.g., they make up less than 1% of the epithelial cells in the crypts of descending colon. They may be found in the intestinal crypts among poorly differentiated cells, and at the surface of stomach and intestine among fully differentiated cells. They appear to undergo renewal, but since they have not been seen in mitosis, they probably arise from the differentiation of some other epithelial cells.
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  • 284
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 281-297 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Electron microscopy of superior cervical ganglia of the mouse shows both pre- and postganglionic elements impinging upon the soma of principal neurons. The preganglionic cholinergic axon terminals are estimated to cover about 0.7% of the total surface area of the neuronal soma and are characterized by dense packing of synaptic vesicles which remain unchanged after the administration of 5-hydroxydopamine. Postganglionic elements are estimated to cover about 1.8% of the total surface of the neuronal soma. In many cases they contain small granular vesicles (with or without agranular reticulum), and are considered to be represented in part by vesiculated segments of the dendrite and in part by recurrent axon collaterals of the principal neuron. These postganglionic elements usually make puncta adhaerentes, but occasionally an efferent synapse, on the soma of principal neurons in the ganglion. Evidence is presented which suggests that the soma, in turn, is capable of influencing the perisomal, postganglionic elements through a somatic efferent synapse.
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  • 285
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 393-413 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The development of the white and red pulp in spleen from thirteen human fetuses measuring from 72 mm to 145 mm in crown-rump length (CRL) was studied using the electron microscope. This period follows the development of the primary vascular reticulum (Weiss, '73).The white pulp appears first as a periarterial sheath with variable numbers of large and medium-sized lymphocytes, monocytes, macrophages, and some granulocytes and erythrocytes. It is always rich in macrophages. At 90 to 100 mm CRL, reticular cells closely associated with collagen and having a distinctive dark hyaloplasm appeared first in the endothelium and close about blood vessels and then out in the pulp. In the white pulp they became circumferentially arranged about the central artery while in the red pulp they formed a branching reticulum. Small lymphocytes were present in increasing number in the periarterial lymphatic sheath after the development of the circumferential reticulum. The venous sinuses developed and the marginal zone stood out as an erythrocyte-rich and macrophage-rich shell of reticulum surrounding the periarterial sheath.
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  • 286
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 415-426 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Nineteen linear and three angular dimensions were measured for 590 left femurs derived from Bronze-Age to present-day population samples. Univariate analysis showed varying patterns of contrast between the populations, depending upon which femoral dimension was compared. Similarly, multivariate analysis also provided varying patterns of contrast between the populations, depending upon which group of dimensions was included in the analysis. Following standardization of the femoral linear dimensions against the maximum femoral length, in contrast, repeat multivariate analyses showed a progression from the Bronze-Age to the present-day samples, although there was only limited discrimination between the samples.
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  • 287
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 441-446 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: We report here the observation of striated collagen produced by notochordal cells in vitro. Fibrils with collagen-like striations were seen in large intercellular spaces following three days of incubation in vitro. Surprisingly, similar fibrils and large sheets (1,500 Å wide) of collagen showing a 510 Å periodicity were seen in notochordal tissues cultured in the presence of β-aminopropionitrile (BAPN), a known inhibitor of cross-linking in tropocollagen. These observations support the view that the notochord should be considered one of several embryonic epithelial tissues known to secrete collagen.
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  • 288
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    American Journal of Anatomy 141 (1974), S. 459-459 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 289
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Fresh pullet eggs (White Leghorn Strain) were incubated to obtain the primitive streak stage of development. Blastoderms were fixed in situ with isotonic aldehyde fixatives and prepared for scanning electron microscopy by means of postosmication, critical point drying and gold-palladium coating.The ventral surface of the chick blastoderm exhibits extreme pleomorphism. There is variation among microappendages (microvilli, blebs, ruffles) which tend to define cellular outlines. In recessed areas adjacent to the ventrolateral aspect of the primitive streak microappendages are present in great profusion. Here clusters of them possess intricate physical relationships. Microvilli may arise from either blebs or ruffles. Other microvilli may terminate in blebs. Extensive connecting structures are present. The primitive streak chick embryo is discussed as a model for the study of microappendages of the plasmalemma.
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  • 291
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The intent of this experiment was to determine whether with an increase in ocular mass there would be an increase in orbital volume. Eighteen, four-week old, 220 to 420 gm Dutch rabbits were used. In 12 animals silicone was injected into one eye but not the opposite one. No silicone was injected into the eyes of six untreated rabbits. In a ten week period the total amount of ten silicone injections into each treated eye ranged from 1.2 to 1.6 ml. After each rabbit was euthanatized, elastic rubber base imprints were made of both cleaned orbits to determine the volumes. In the untreated animals the differences between the right and left orbital volumes ranged from  -  0.1 to 0.2 ml ( -  2.4 to 4.7%). The mean of the differences was not statistically significant. When the eyes were injected with silicone, the differences in orbital volumes between the injected and non-injected sides ranged from 0.6 to 0 ml (14.6 to 0%). The mean of the differences was 0.3 ml which is statistically significant. It was concluded that periodic intrabulbar injections of silicone in the growing rabbit significantly increased orbital volume.
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    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 497-521 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The fine morphology of the choledocho-duodenal junctions of dogs and cats was studied by means of microdissection, classical histological staining techniques and by demonstrating in serial sections non-specific cholinesterases, which stain the smooth muscle components excellently. The inbuilt cholinergic nervous apparatus was studied in serial sections by demonstrating acetylcholinesterase. By combining these methods, the three-dimensional structural arrangement of the intrinsic cholinergic innervation system, with reference to the various substructures to be innervated, could be studied and mapped in detail.The most important features in the morphology, with respect to the function, were the tapering of the terminal ductus choledochus into a nozzle, the existence of concentric retrograde saccules around the ampulla and the intramural part of the bile duct, and the complex construction of the sphincters. Normally such a structure makes possible an active suction-pressure pumping for evacuation of bile and pancreatic juice, being at the same time effective in preventing regurgitation of the duodenal fluid. On the contrary, if the orificium of the ampulla is obstructed, this structural arrangement probably facilitates regurgitation, especially into the pancreatic duct.The intrinsic cholinergic nervous apparatus of the choledocho-duodenal junction was extremely rich, especially if compared with the cholinergic innervation of the muscular layer of the gut wall. This can probably be considered as an indication of complex motor (and possibly associated sensory) functions of the sphincters, in contrast to only slow gross contractions of the gut.To summarize: both morphological and neuroanatomical bases seem to be provided for rhythmic suction-pressure pumping as well as for sensitive protective reflex functions in the choledocho-duodenal junctions of the dog and cat. The finely graded complex interactions of the various muscle components are regulated by connecting and integrating neural elements between the individual smooth muscle units.
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  • 293
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    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Peripheral blood lymphocytes from three patients with defective differentiation of B cells were studied by routine electron microscopic techniques. One patient had severe combined immunodeficiency with rudimentary development of the B cell line. Two had immune deficits secondary to the B cell malignancy, chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Accumulations of tuboreticular structures were found in the cytoplasm of lymphocytes from the severe combined immune deficiency patient, sometimes in close association with annulate lamellae. The tuboreticular structures resemble those described in lymphocytes and endothelial cells of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. In one patient with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, cylindrical arrangements of ribosomal material occupied the cytoplasm of many lymphocytes. These cylinders were observed in samples of blood drawn at different times and after tissue culture of lymphocytes with and without pokeweed mitogen. The other patient with chronic lymphocytic leukemia had circulating lymphocytes with material identified as IgM in the perinuclear spaces and dilated cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum. This material sometimes had a crystalline structure.These observations indicate that in some cases functional immunological deficits in B cells, manifested by failure to differentiate to mature secretory cells, may be correlated with morphological aberrations of protein-manufacturing organelles within the cell.
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  • 295
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    American Journal of Anatomy 139 (1974), S. 129-134 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Utilizing immunohistochemistry with rabbit antiserum to synthetic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LRH), LRH was localized in the peripheral region of the median eminence in the mouse and rat, and more generally in the median eminence of the guinea pig.
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  • 297
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    Notes: Reactions for hydrolytic enzymes such as aminopeptidase, β-glucuronidase, N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase, arylsulfatase and non-specific esterases indicated various degrees of activity within the chondrocytes of the young mandibular condyle. Most of the reaction products of the above enzymes appeared as discrete granules, which might indicate a lysosomal origin. The most intense activity of these enzymes was observed within chondroblasts and premineralizing hypertrophic chondrocytes. However, chondrocytes within the mineralizing zone also appeared synthetically active. The latter cells, as well as those at the adjacent ossification front, revealed some activity by a majority of the enzymes tested. This could indicate that some metabolic functions, although reduced in degree, continue in the cells of these mineralizing zones of endochondral ossification.Matrical reactions, with the exception of arylsulfatase and aminopeptidase, were essentially negative. The positive reactions for the latter enzymes might be an indication of their involvement in the process of extracellular mineralization.
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    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The development of the fetal membranes of the North African jerboa (Jaculus) and the North American jumping mouse (Zapus) were examined by light microscopy, and the interhemal membrane of Zapus was studied by electron microscopy. Early stages of Jaculus show implantation to be antimesometrial with the embryonic disc oriented mesometrially. Amniogenesis is by folding and there is a distinct epamnionic cavity. Yolk sac inversion is complete, but the disappearance of the parietal segment occurs relatively late, during the early fetal period. Those early stages of Zapus which were available indicated a close similarity to Jaculus. Both Jaculus and Zapus are unusual in the manner of development and composition of the chorio-allantoic placenta. Development of cytotrophoblast and syncytiotrophoblast is arrested early and these layers eventually disappear. Trophoblastic giant cells migrate into the allantoic mesenchyme to form the maternal blood channels of the labyrinth. In Jaculus, a complex interdigitation exists between yolk sac villi and arterial channels bringing maternal blood to the labyrinth. This relationship is much less intimate and extensive in Zapus. Electron microscopic examination of the interhemal membrane of Zapus shows it to be hemomonochorial, its only trophoblastic element being the giant cell cytoplasm. Thus, the Zapus placenta is to date one of very few hemochorial placentas known to lack trophoblastic syncytium in its interhemal membrane. Comparison of the total development and structure of the fetal membranes in these two genera with that of other rodents indicates that the membranes of the Dipodoidea, like the Geomyoidea, are intermediate in type between those of the Sciuromorpha and Myomorpha.
    Additional Material: 13 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 299
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Knowledge of placentation in bears has been limited to analysis of a single shed placenta of the European brown bear. It was shown that the mature allantoic placenta is discoidal, endotheliochorial, provided with a circular marginal hematoma, and that the allantoic sac is large and permanent. The present study, based on a small series of conceptuses younger than any previously examined, provides new details concerning implantation and the morphogenesis of the fetal membranes, placenta and paraplacental organs. Implantation in the black bear is central and superficial; the orientation of the embryonic disc is antimesometrial. Amniogenesis and chorion formation are almost certainly accomplished by folding. The decidual reaction is minimal. As in other carnivores the yolk sac is prominent early, but progressively declines. A well-developed choriovitelline placenta is formed early, but is eliminated before the limb bud stage. The bilaminar omphalopleure persists only slightly beyond the limb bud stage. The allantois, however, is extensive and permanent. Initially, the allantoic placenta is cup-shaped but eventually flattens out to form the discoidal placenta. It is lobuliform and endotheliochorial, and probably a marked attenuation of the interhemal membrane occurs in later stages. The marginal hematoma, which is completed before the limb bud stage, is formed by enlargement and coalescence of separate extravasations, and apparently remains fully functional to term. Overall, morphogenetic sequences and relationships in bears more nearly resemble those of the dog than of other carnivores.
    Additional Material: 2 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 300
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    American Journal of Anatomy 140 (1974), S. 577-582 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The fate of cortical granules was ascertained in cold-shock activated rabbit eggs. Unfertilized oocytes were obtained 14 hours after intravenous injection of Human Chorionic Gonadotropin. Experimental oocytes were stored at 6 to 10°C for 24 hours in F10 medium containing 10% rabbit serum. Control oocytes, and the experimental ones subsequent to cold-shock treatment, were incubated for 24 hours. Formation of ‘pronuclei’ occurred in 6% of the cold-shock treated oocytes. None of the control oocytes were activated. Electron microscopic observations show that activation occurred without the dehiscence of cortical granule content into the perivitelline space. Cortical granules were dispersed in the cytoplasm or clumped together at the periphery. Occasionally, cortical granules were found discharged into the perivitelline space with the limiting membrane intact.
    Additional Material: 6 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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