The morphological alterations of hepatocytes of cave-dwelling salamander Proteus anguinus anguinus after food deprivation periods of one and 18 months were investigated and the concentrations of glycogen, lipids, and proteins in the liver were determined. Quantitative analyses of the hepatocyte size, the lipid droplets, the number of mitochondria, and volume densities of M and P in the hepatocytes were completed. After one month of food deprivation, the cytological changes in the hepatocytes are mainly related to the distribution and amount of glycogen, which was dispersed in the cytoplasm and failed to form clumps typical of normal liver tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe accumulation of cadmium, its affinity for metallothioneins (MTs), and its relation to copper, zinc, and selenium were investigated in the experimental mudpuppy Necturus maculosus and the common toad Bufo bufo captured in nature. Specimens of N. maculosus were exposed to waterborne Cd (85 μg/L) for up to 40 days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor over two decades, a manufacturer of electrical capacitors disposed of its waste within the karstic hinterland of the Krupa River (Slovenia) resulting in the surroundings becomming heavily polluted with PCB. Albeit the extent of the contamination has been known since 1983 and the Krupa River has become one of the most PCB polluted river in Europe, the effects on the cave fauna of the region remain unknown. The most famous cave dweller of the Krupa hinterland is the endemic cave salamander Proteus anguinus anguinus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOogenesis in the neotenic, cave dwelling salamander Proteus anguinus anguinus has not been studied yet, and this study provides a detailed description of the early growth of the oocytes. Early previtellogene oocytes ranging from 100 to 600 µm in diameter were examined by light and transmission electron microscopy. The oocytes were divided into two stages based on size, color, and histology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim
January 2007
In order to evaluate their suitability for physiological and ecotoxicological studies, hepatocytes were isolated from the common mudpuppy (Necturus maculosus) using a two-step collagenase perfusion. Hepatocytes in primary culture were investigated for 14 d using light and electron microscopy and biochemical analyses. A typical perfusion yielded 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistological, histochemical, and ultrastructural features of the gut of the European endemic cave salamander Proteus anguinus were studied. The gut is a relatively undifferentiated muscular tube lined with a simple columnar epithelium containing numerous goblet cells. The mucosa and underlying lamina propria/submucosa are elevated into a number of high longitudinal folds projecting into the lumen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPigment Cell Res
August 2003
The ultrastructural characteristics of melanosomes and premelanosomes observed during the biogenesis of melanosomes in liver pigment cells of the neotenic cave salamander Proteus anguinus (Proteidae) are described. It is well known that amphibian liver pigment cells, also known as Kupffer cells (KC), contain melanosomes and are able to synthesize melanin. Liver pigment cells of P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied ultrastructure of the photoreceptor cells in the pineal organ of blind, depigmented, neotenic cave salamander, Proteus anguinus. Unlike in epigean vertebrates the outer segments of most photoreceptor cells consists of concentrically arranged lamellae, however; in few cells, the outer segments contain 7-9 plasma membrane disks. In both types of photoreceptor cells the outer segments enclose lumps of vesicles of different sizes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOctavolateral sensory organs (auditory and lateral line organs) of cave salamander Proteus anguinus are highly differentiated. In the saccular macula of the inner ear the complex pattern of hair cell orientation and the large otoconial mass enable particle displacement direction detection. Additionally, the same organ, through air cavities within the body, enables detection of underwater sound pressure changes thus acting as a hearing organ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe stages of differentiation of the inner ear sensory epithelia of the neotenous cave urodele, Proteus anguinus, was studied with light and electron microscopy. Comparative ultrastructural analysis among specimens of different sizes confirms that new sensory cells may be generated throughout life, particularly along the periphery of the saccular macula. The inner ear of Proteus contains at least four types of sensory cells that differ in their apical ciliary part.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe tectorial structures of the inner ear of the proteid salamander Proteus anguinus were studied with transmission and scanning electron microscopy in order to analyze the ultrastructure of the otoconial membranes and otoconial masses of the maculae and the tectorial membrane of the papilla amphibiorum. Both otoconial and tectorial membranes consist of two parts: (1) a compact part and (2) a fibrillar part that joins the membrane with the sensory epithelium. Masses of otoconia occupy the lumina above these membranes.
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