The sea anemone, Stomphia coccinea, propels itself through the water by a series of whip-like swimming motions when stimulated by the asteroid Dermasterias imbricata. It has been previously concluded that the reacting substance is located only in the coelomic fluid and in the aboral surface of this
An investigation on the swimming reaction of the anemoneStomphia coccinea. I. Partial isolation of a reacting substance from the asteroid dermasterias imbricata
โ Scribed by Ward, Jack A.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1965
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 669 KB
- Volume
- 158
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-104X
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โฆ Synopsis
Behaviorally the sea anemone, Stomphia coccinea, is an unusual actinarian compared to other members of the Actinaria. When the asteroid, Demasterias imbricata, is brought into contact with Stomphia it responds by propelling itself through the water by a series of whip-like swimming motions.
Tissue homogenates from the aboral surface of DemasteTias proved to be as effective as the entire animal. Homogenates from all other tissues gave negative results. The substance which causes the swimming response is dialyzable, thermostable, and from qualitative tests proved to be primarily carbohydrate. Acidic hydrolysis (HCL) of the polysaccharide revealed three definitive products. Enzymatic hydrolysis by hemicellulase yields the same compounds but caused a complete degradation of the substance. Chromatographic results showed that the compounds are probably products from an amino-polysaccharide.
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