Mechanical sensitivity and cell coupling in the ciliated epithelial cells ofMytilus edulis gill
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cell and tissue research
- Vol. 259 (1) , 51-60
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00571429
Abstract
Transmission electron microscopy has not provided strong evidence for gap junctions inMytilus edulis gill tissue, in spite of extensive physiological evidence for coupled ciliary arrest in lateral cells and coupled activation in abfrontal cells. To investigate the kinds and relative distribution of cell junctions and also to determine whether ciliary membrane particle differences exist in these two types of oppositely mechanically sensitive cells, we analyzed the structure of these and two other ciliated cell types (frontal and laterofrontal) by freeze-fracture replication. Gap junctions occur in all four ciliated cell types, but they are relatively small and of variable morphology, often consisting of elongate, winding complexes of membrane particles. Statistically, such structures rarely would be recognized as gap junctions in thin sections. Gap junctions appear to be most abundant between the highly coupled abfrontal cells, minimal between laterofrontal cells, and not evident in the epithelial cells that separate coupled ciliated cell types. The ciliary necklaces of the mechanically activated abfrontal cilia are typically 4- or 5-stranded while those of the remaining three cell types are mainly 3-stranded. In developing gill tips, ciliated cells have abundant gap junctions and newly formed cilia have a full complement of necklace particles. Nascent lateral cilia are not mechanically sensitive, indicating that the acquisition of mechanosensitivity does not correlate with the presence of ciliary necklace or other membrane particles. Lateral and laterofrontal cells become sensitive to neurotransmitters soon after the appearance of the latter during development, but mechanosensitivity of both lateral and abfrontal cells arises substantially later.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mechanical stimulation activates beating in calcium-arrested lateral cilia ofMytilus edulis gillJournal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility, 1986
- Motile statocyst cilia transmit rather than directly transduce mechanical stimuliThe Journal of cell biology, 1980
- Dispersal of junctional particles, not internalization, during the in vivo disappearance of gap junctionsCell, 1980
- Loss and reappearance of gap junctions in regenerating liver.The Journal of cell biology, 1978
- Ultrastructure of the proximal region of somatic cilia in Paramecium tetraurelia.The Journal of cell biology, 1978
- Changes in the blood-brain barrier of the central nervous system in the blowfly during development, with special reference to the formation and disaggregation of gap and tight junctionsDevelopmental Biology, 1978
- Ciliogenesis during the sequential formation of molluscan gill filamentsDevelopmental Biology, 1975
- CILIARY MEMBRANE DIFFERENTIATIONS IN TETRAHYMENA PYRIFORMIS The Journal of cell biology, 1974
- SEPTATE AND GAP JUNCTIONS IN MOLLUSCAN GILL EPITHELIUMThe Journal of cell biology, 1971
- THE CELL JUNCTION IN A LAMELLIBRANCH GILL CILIATED EPITHELIUMThe Journal of cell biology, 1970