Immunocytochemical studies on the islet and the gut of the arctic lamprey, Lampetra japonica.
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by International Society of Histology & Cytology in Archives of Histology and Cytology
- Vol. 51 (1) , 109-119
- https://doi.org/10.1679/aohc.51.109
Abstract
The endocrine cells and nerves in the islet and the gut of the arctic lamprey Lampetra japonica were examined immunocytochemistry by using antisera against brain-gut peptides and amine. The cellular composition of the islets as reported by previous researchers in European species of the lamprey was confirmed in the present study. The islet consisted exclusively of insulin immunoreactive cells in the larvae (ammocoetes), whereas in the adult somatostatin immunoreactive cells were added to the insulin immunoreactive cells; the gut epithelium in the adult was no devoid of somatostatin cells. In the gut of the lamprey, the endocrine cells-which were flask-shaped with a cytoplasmic process extended to the lumen-were classified into three types in the larvae, but were represented by a single type in the adult. In the larval lamprey, the first type was immunoreactive for somatostatin, the second one for gastrin/cholecystokinin (CCK) and the third cell type was immunoreactive for glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide and FMRFamide, simultaneously. In the gut the adult lamprey, the single type of endocrine cell reacted simultaneously to C-terminal specific anti-glucagon serum, N-terminal specific anti-glucagon serum, anti-bovine PP serum, anti-neuropeptide Y serum and anti-FMRFamide serum. These cells occurred most frequently in the upper intestine, their distribution decreasing from the middle to the lower intestine. Two types of peptide containing nerves were identified in the islet and the gut of the larval and adult lamprey. The first type of neurons (perikarya and fibers) was immunoreactive for serotonin and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and was located in the mucous and muscular layer of the intestine and in the islet. The second type of neurons contained with serotonin- and gastrin releasing peptide (GRP)-like immunoreactivities and was scattered exclusively in the muscular layer of the gut. In larval and adult lampreys, a few serotonin-CGRP immunoreactive nerve cell bodies and beaded fibers were found in the connective tissue around the islet cell cords. These nerve fibers were sometimes closely apposed to the blood capillaries and to the islet cells. These findings indicate that a neuroendocrine correlation comparable with that in mammals may have been established in the islet of this most primitive vertebrate.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gastro-intestinal and neurohormonal peptides in the alimentary tract and cerebral complex ofCiona intestinalis (Ascidiaceae)Cell and tissue research, 1982
- Immunohistochemical localization of polypeptide hormones in endocrine cells of the digestive tract of Branchiostoma lanceolatumCell and tissue research, 1981
- Occurrence of neurotensin-immunoreactive cells in the digestive tract of lower vertebrates and deuterostomian invertebratesCell and tissue research, 1980
- Glicentin Immunoreactive Cells: Their Relationship to Glucagon-Producing Cells*Endocrinology, 1979
- A cytochemical and immunofluorescence study of endocrine cells in the gut of the ascidian Styela clavaCell and tissue research, 1979
- Proposal of a Neurosecretory System in the PancreasArchivum histologicum japonicum, 1979
- Localisation of somatostatin- and gastrin-like immunoreactivity in the gastrointestinal tract of Ciona intestinalis L.Cell and tissue research, 1978
- New types of islet cells in a cyclostome, Petromyzon marinus L.Cell and tissue research, 1976
- Islet histophysiology: Evolutionary correlationsGeneral and Comparative Endocrinology, 1975
- ENZYME-LABELED ANTIBODIES: PREPARATION AND APPLICATION FOR THE LOCALIZATION OF ANTIGENSJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1966