THE MOLLUSCAN RHOGOCYTE (PORE-CELL, BLASENZELLE, CELLULE NUCALE), AND ITS SIGNIFICANCE FOR IDEAS ON NEPHRIDIAL EVOLUTION
Open Access
- 2 May 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Molluscan Studies
- Vol. 62 (2) , 185-211
- https://doi.org/10.1093/mollus/62.2.185
Abstract
The rhogocyte (Leydig's cell, cellule nucale, Blasen-zelle, pore cell) is a specific molluscan cell type that occurs throughout the animal's primary body cavity, i.e free in the haemocoel or embedded in connective tissue. Rhogocytes closely resemble cyrtocytes and podocytes jn having slit-Uke diaphragms with an encoating extracellular matrix at their surface which probably acts as a molecular sieve However, rhogocytes are solitary cells, whereas cyrtocytes and podocytes form epitheha Occurrence, variability, naming, and possible functions of the rhogocyte among the MoUusca are reviewed and discussed. In general, rhogocytes play an important role in metal ion metabolism of molluscs, they are possibly involved in the recycling of respiratory pigments and may also act in detoxification. Up to now direct homologues of the molluscan rhogocyte have not been described in any other bi-laterian phylum, so-called ‘pore cells’ of other phyla show entirely different fine-structures However, at least partial (serial) homology can be accepted between rhogocytes (free cells), arthropod nephro-cytes (cell aggregates or solitary cells) and podocytes (true epithelial cells), and there is also a cytological and functional continuum of both rhogocytes and podocytes to protonephndial cyrto- respectively solenocytes. Implications of this postulated ‘cell-family’ with slit-diaphragms and their respective ultrafiltration systems for theories on the evolution of filtration nephndia are discussed.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Morphology, behavior, and histogenesis of the pelagosphera larva of Phascolosoma agassizii (Sipuncula)Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 1973