Müller Carsten H G, Meyer-Rochow V Benno
University of Rostock, Institute for Biosciences, Section General and Systematic Zoology, 18051 Rostock, Germany.
J Morphol. 2006 Jul;267(7):850-65. doi: 10.1002/jmor.10444.
The lateral lens eye of adult Craterostigmus tasmanianus Pocock, 1902 (a centipede from Australia and New Zealand) was examined by light and electron microscopy. An elliptical, bipartite eye is located frontolaterally on either side of the head. The nearly circular posterior part of the eye is characterized by a plano-convex cornea, whereas no corneal elevation is visible in the crescentic anterior part. The so-called lateral ocellus appears cup-shaped in longitudinal section and includes a flattened corneal lens comprising a homogeneous and pigmentless epithelium of cornea-secreting cells. The retinula consists of two kinds of photoreceptive cells. The distribution of the distal retinula cells is highly irregular. Variable numbers of cells are grouped together in multilayered, thread-like unions extending from the ventral and dorsal margins into the center of the eye. Around their knob-like or bilobed apices the distal retinula cells give rise to fused polymorphic rhabdomeres. Both everse and inverse cells occur in the distal retinula. Smaller, club-shaped proximal retinula cells are present in the second (limited to the peripheral region) and proximal third of the eye, where they are arranged in dual cell units. In its apical region each unit produces a small, unidirectional rhabdom of interdigitating microvilli. All retinula cells are surrounded by numerous sheath cells. A thin basal lamina covers the whole eye cup, which, together with the distal part of the optic nerve, is wrapped by external pigment cells filled with granules of varying osmiophily. The eye of C. tasmanianus seemingly displays very high complexity compared to many other hitherto studied euarthropod eyes. Besides the complex arrangement of the entire retinula, the presence of a bipartite eye cup, intraocellar exocrine glands, inverse retinula cells, distal retinula cells with bilobed apices, separated pairs of proximal retinula cells, medio-retinal axon bundles, and the formation of a vertically partitioned, antler-like distal rhabdom represent apomorphies of the craterostigmomorph eye. These characters therefore collectively underline the separate position of the Craterostigmomorpha among pleurostigmophoran centipedes. The remaining retinal features of C. tasmanianus agree with those known from other chilopod eyes and, thus, may be considered plesiomorphies. Characters like the unicorneal eye cup, sheath cells, and proximal rhabdomeres with interdigitating microvilli were already present in the ground pattern of the Pleurostigmophora. Other retinal features were developed in the ancestral lineage of the Phylactometria (e.g., large elliptical eyes, external pigment cells, polygonal sculpturations on the corneal surface). The homology of all chilopod eyes (including Notostigmophora) is based principally on the possession of a dual type retinula.
对成年塔斯马尼亚巨蜈蚣(Craterostigmus tasmanianus Pocock,1902,一种来自澳大利亚和新西兰的蜈蚣)的侧眼进行了光学显微镜和电子显微镜检查。椭圆形的双叶眼位于头部两侧的额外侧。眼睛近乎圆形的后部有一个平凸透镜状角膜,而新月形的前部没有可见的角膜隆起。所谓的侧单眼在纵切面上呈杯状,包括一个扁平的角膜晶状体,由分泌角膜的细胞组成的均匀且无色素的上皮构成。小眼由两种感光细胞组成。远端小眼细胞的分布非常不规则。数量不等的细胞聚集在一起,形成从腹侧和背侧边缘延伸至眼中心的多层丝状联合体。在其球状或双叶状顶端周围,远端小眼细胞产生融合的多态性视杆。远端小眼中既有外翻细胞也有内翻细胞。较小的棒状近端小眼细胞存在于眼的第二部分(仅限于周边区域)和近端三分之一处,它们以双细胞单位排列。在其顶端区域,每个单位产生一个由相互交错的微绒毛组成的小的单向视杆。所有小眼细胞都被大量鞘细胞包围。一层薄的基膜覆盖整个眼杯,眼杯连同视神经的远端部分被充满不同嗜锇性颗粒的外部色素细胞包裹。与许多迄今研究过的真节肢动物眼睛相比,塔斯马尼亚巨蜈蚣的眼睛似乎显示出非常高的复杂性。除了整个小眼的复杂排列外,双叶眼杯的存在、眼内的外分泌腺、内翻小眼细胞、顶端有双叶的远端小眼细胞、分离的近端小眼细胞对、视网膜中部轴突束以及垂直分隔的鹿角状远端视杆的形成代表了巨蜈蚣目眼睛的衍征。因此,这些特征共同强调了巨蜈蚣目在侧气门蜈蚣中的独特地位。塔斯马尼亚巨蜈蚣其余的视网膜特征与其他唇足纲动物眼睛已知的特征一致,因此可被视为祖征。像单角膜眼杯、鞘细胞以及有相互交错微绒毛的近端视杆等特征在侧气门蜈蚣的基型中就已存在。其他视网膜特征是在叶形纲的祖先谱系中发展而来的(例如,大的椭圆形眼睛、外部色素细胞、角膜表面的多边形纹饰)。所有唇足纲动物眼睛(包括背单眼纲)的同源性主要基于拥有双类型小眼。