## Abstract The regeneration of appendages of __Protopterus annectens__ and __P. aethiopicus__ has been studied. Both limbs and tail demonstrate a notable capacity for selfβreplacement. The initial direction of growth in the regenerate depended upon the nature of the amputation plane: straight, poi
Regeneration in the African lungfish,Protopterus. II. Branching structures
β Scribed by Conant, Elizabeth Babbott
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1972
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 794 KB
- Volume
- 181
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-104X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
It is possible to elicit the growth of a lateral branch from either the pectoral or the pelvic fin of the African lungfish Protopterus by excising a wedge of tissue, including cartilage, from the original limb. In pectoral limbs, 18 notches produced four bifids, but in pelvic limbs only one out of 14 cuts resulted in a branching element. Although cuts were distributed along the length of the limbs and along both anterior and posterior faces, accessory structures were elicited only from the posterior and posteriorβdorsal faces of the pectoral limb and from the anterior edge of the pelvic. The new branch was always of a size, proportion, and function nearly identical with that of the original, and to date none has grown longer than the equivalent branch of the primary limb. One broken pectoral limb gave rise spontaneously to a bifid growth.
Fully developed horizontal branches effect changes in the long axis of the limb from which they have grown. Although the new filament first grows out perpendicular to the long axis of the primary element, it later assumes a shallower angle. Subsequent skewing of the axis of the primary limb results in a βYβ configuration. However, one vertically directed branch on the posteriordorsal surface of a pectoral limb, after ten months, still retains its original orientation, there having been no change in either its orientation or that of the original limb. One caudal anomaly is figured.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The anatomical distribution of somatostatin-immunoreactive structures and the autoradiographic localization of somatostatin binding sites were investigated in the brain of the African lungfish, Protopterus annectens. In general, there was a good correlation between the distribution of somatostatin-i
## Abstract The distribution of glial intermediate filament molecular markers, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and vimentin, in the brain and spinal cord of the African lungfish, __Protopterus annectens__, was examined by light microscopy immunoperoxidase cytochemistry. Glial fibrillary aci
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