DEVELOPMENT OF VESTIGIAL TAIL MUSCLE ACETYLCHOLINESTERASE IN EMBRYOS OF AN ANURAL ASCIDIAN SPECIES
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Biological Bulletin
- Vol. 156 (3) , 393-407
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1540926
Abstract
The ascidian Molgula arenata produces an anural larva lacking a tail and other structural features of typical urodele larvae in the Urochordate family Molgulidae, yet its embryos developed a histochemically detectable acetylcholinesterase in the tail muscle rudiment. Development of the myoblasts seemed to fail during the neurula stage. Larval enzyme activity occurred at a mean of 5-6% of the level found in the urodele species Molgula occidentalis and Molgula manhattensis, as measured by scanning integrating microdensitometry of the histochemical reaction product. Some anural larvae had as much as 20% of the enzyme activity in urodele larvae. This example of vestigial expression in the absence of other urodele larval features illustrates the autonomy of a histospecific enzyme development thought to be controlled by an egg cytoplasmic determinant. Partial suppression of the determinant may be the cause of this diminished expression. Two other anural molgulid species, Molgula occulta and Bostrichobranchus pilularis, did not have vestigial larval enzyme and possibly have lost the determinant completely.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- The organization and cell-lineage of the ascidian egg / by Edwin G. Conklin.Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1905