## Abstract Hatching occurs in all vertebrates, yet knowledge about the control of this developmental transition is incomplete. Incubation of halibut __Hippoglossus hippoglossus__ eggs in light results in sustained inhibition of hatching. The inhibitory efficacy of light is affected both by its int
Morphogenesis of the hatching gland of Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus)
β Scribed by Helvik, Jon Vidar ;Oppen-Berntsen, Dag Oscar ;Flood, Per Robert ;Walther, Bernt Theodor
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 920 KB
- Volume
- 200
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1432-041X
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β¦ Synopsis
The halibut hatching gland (HG) cells are first observed as a cellular disc in front of the embryonic head around the midpoint of intra ovo development. The disc is subsequently transformed into a loop of increasing diameter as the HG cells migrate over the anterior part of the yolk sac. When the HG disc is transformed into a loop, the density of HG cells is highest at the migratory front. Some HG cells lag behind the migrating front at the early stages of HG development. At maturity, all cells are contained in a narrow belt which is about 10 cells wide. The HG belt structure consists of a monolayer of HG cells, and is maintained while the cells migrate between the two epidermal cell layers. Migration is halted about 2 days before normal hatching when the HG cells reach a destination at about a right angle to on the embryonic axis. Under the scanning electron microscope, the differentiating HG cells protrude as a ridge the yolk sac surface. The HG cells immunostain with antiserum to hatching enzyme when the HG is observed as a crescent structure around the embryonic head. By counting the number of immunostaining cells in composite photos of the entire yolk sac membrane, we found that the HG belt consists of approximately 2000 secretory cells at maturity. This cell number stays fairly constant throughout the period of HG cell migration. Accordingly, mitoses of the halibut HG cells have generally ceased prior to morphogenesis, and cytodifferentiation is already quite advanced when cell migration starts.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The influence of some environmental parameters in the regulation of hatching of halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus) embryos is reported. The progress of hatching was observed when light, oxygen and turbulence were varied. Environmental parameters influenced the induction of hatching, while the exit