An ultrastructural study of cell junctions and the cytoskeleton in epithelial cells of the molluscan integument
β Scribed by A. Bairati; M. Gioria
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 917 KB
- Volume
- 269
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0362-2525
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Cell junctions and the cytoskeleton of integumental epidermal cells from six bivalves, four gastropods, and two cephalopods were studied by transmission electron microscopy. In all species examined, the junctions in supporting cells presented the following similar pattern: an apicalβlateral adhesion belt (occluding junctions were not observed); (b) a lateral complex of septate junctions and smooth septate junctions, with interdigitations between adjacent cells while the gap junctions were not constantly present, and a basal complex with hemidesmosomes, focal contacts, and sometimes basolateral adherent junctions. Desmosomes were never observed. Microfilamentous and microgranular material were present throughout the cells, as bundles of microfilaments within microvilli and the terminal web, within interdigitations, and as cytoplasmic plaques forming part of the adherent junctions, hemidesmosomes, and focal contacts. Bundles of intermediate filaments that originated from basal hemidesmosomes were located close to and oriented parallel with the lateral plasma membrane and terminated within the terminal web. In cells of Aplysia depilans, intermediate filaments converged apically to terminate in hemidesmosomeβlike structures at the bases of the microvilli. In the cephalopods, hemidesmosomes were never observed and intermediate filaments made direct contact with the basal cell membrane. Some functional interpretations and hypotheses were also discussed. J. Morphol., 2008. Β© 2007 WileyβLiss, Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Displacement of uterine epithelial cells is an important aspect of implantation in the rat and other species, allowing invasion of the blastocyst into the endometrial stroma. Desmosomes, which are part of the lateral junctional complex, function in cellβtoβcell adhesion, and are therefo
An extrapulmonary oat cell carcinoma arising in the larynx is described. Ultrastructurally the tumor is identical to the oat cell carcinoma of pulmonary origin. The pressure of neurosecretory granules in our case strongly suggests that the tumor is derived from Kulchitsky-like cells, a histogenesis
## Abstract In cell culture, both endothelial and epithelial cell monolayers have been found to generate structurally similar tight junctional complexes, as assessed by thin section electron microscopy. Although structurally similar, the tight junctional complexes of the two cell types are, at leas