Criel Godelieve R J, Van Oostveldt Patrick, MacRae Thomas H
Department of Anatomy, Embryology and Histology, University of Gent, Gent, Belgium.
J Morphol. 2005 Feb;263(2):203-15. doi: 10.1002/jmor.10298.
Epidermally derived tendon cells attach the exoskeleton (cuticle) of the Branchiopod crustacean, Artemia franciscana, to underlying muscle in the hindgut, while the structurally similar transalar tendon (epithelial) cells, which also arise from the epidermis and are polarized, connect dorsal and ventral exopodite surfaces. To establish these latter attachments the transalar tendon cells interact with cuticles on opposite sides of the exopodite by way of their apical surfaces and with one another via basal regions, or the cuticle attachments may be mediated through linkages with phagocytic storage cells found in the hemolymph. In some cases, phyllopod tendon cells attach directly to muscle cells. Tendon cells in the hindgut of Artemia possess microtubule bundles, as do the transalar cells, and they extend from the basal myotendinal junction to the apical domain located near the cuticle. The bundled microtubules intermingle with thin filaments reminiscent of microfilaments, but intermediate filament-like structures are absent. Microtubule bundles converging at apical cell surfaces contact structures termed apical invaginations, composed of cytoplasmic membrane infoldings associated with electron-dense material. Intracuticular rods protrude from apical invaginations, either into the cuticle during intermolt or the molting fluid in premolt. Confocal microscopy of immunofluorescently stained samples revealed tyrosinated, detyrosinated, and acetylated tubulins, the first time posttranslationally modified isoforms of this protein have been demonstrated in crustacean tendon cells. Microfilaments, as shown by staining with phalloidin, coincided spatially with microtubule bundles. Artemia tendon cells clearly represent an interesting system for study of cytoskeleton organization within the context of cytoplasmic polarity and the results in this article indicate functional cooperation of microtubules and microfilaments. These cytoskeletal elements, either acting independently or in concert, may transmit tension from muscle to cuticle in the hindgut and resist compression when connecting exopodite cuticular surfaces.
表皮衍生的肌腱细胞将鳃足纲甲壳动物卤虫的外骨骼(角质层)与后肠中的下层肌肉相连,而结构相似的跨翼肌腱(上皮)细胞同样起源于表皮且具有极性,它们连接着背侧和腹侧的外肢表面。为了建立这些连接,跨翼肌腱细胞通过其顶端表面与外肢两侧的角质层相互作用,并通过基部区域相互连接,或者角质层连接可能通过与血淋巴中发现的吞噬储存细胞的连接来介导。在某些情况下,叶足肌腱细胞直接附着于肌肉细胞。卤虫后肠中的肌腱细胞与跨翼细胞一样,都拥有微管束,这些微管束从基部的肌肌腱连接处延伸至靠近角质层的顶端区域。成束的微管束与类似微丝的细丝交织在一起,但不存在中间丝样结构。汇聚在顶端细胞表面的微管束与称为顶端内陷的结构接触,顶端内陷由与电子致密物质相关的细胞质膜内褶组成。角质层内杆从顶端内陷伸出,在蜕皮间期伸入角质层,在蜕皮前期伸入蜕皮液中。免疫荧光染色样本的共聚焦显微镜观察显示了酪氨酸化、去酪氨酸化和乙酰化的微管蛋白,这是首次在甲壳类肌腱细胞中证明该蛋白的翻译后修饰异构体。如用鬼笔环肽染色所示,微丝在空间上与微管束重合。卤虫肌腱细胞显然是研究细胞质极性背景下细胞骨架组织的一个有趣系统,本文的结果表明微管和微丝存在功能协作。这些细胞骨架成分,无论是独立作用还是协同作用,都可能在后肠中将张力从肌肉传递至角质层,并在连接外肢角质层表面时抵抗压缩。