Pisam M, Boeuf G, Prunet P, Rambourg A
Département de Biologie, Centre d'Etudes Nucléaires de Saclay, Gif sur Yvette, France.
Am J Anat. 1990 Jan;187(1):21-31. doi: 10.1002/aja.1001870104.
In order to elucidate the functional significance of accessory cells in freshwater fishes, such as the rainbow trout, which displays a poor adaptability to seawater life, a search for such cells was performed in two stenohaline freshwater fishes: the loach and the gudgeon. Accessory cells were never encountered in these species; but, in contrast, two types of chloride cells were observed consistently that strikingly resembled the alpha- and beta-cells previously described in the guppy, a freshwater-adapted euryhaline fish. The alpha-cell, a pale and elongated chloride cell, was located at the base of the secondary lamellae in close contact with the arterioarterial pillar capillary. Darker, ovoid chloride cells resembling the beta-cell were found exclusively in the interlamellar region of the primary epithelium facing the central venous sinous. The latter cells frequently formed multicellular complexes linked together by deep, narrow, apical junctions. In another experiment, a stenohaline seawater fish, the turbot, was adapted to diluted 5% saltwater and to fresh water. In seawater, the gill epithelium contained only one type of chloride cell, always associated with accessory cells. Due to numerous cytoplasmic interdigitations between the accessory cells and the apical portion of the chloride cell, there was a noticeable increase in the length of the shallow apical junction, sealing off the intercellular space between the two cell types. In 5% saltwater, there was a decrease in the number of these interdigitations and a concomitant decrease in the length of the shallow apical junction. In fresh water, chloride cells were partially or completely separated from the outside medium by modified accessory cells. It is thus concluded that accessory cells are found exclusively in fish living in seawater or preadapted to seawater and that they probably are involved in the formation and modulation of paracellular pathways for ionic excretion. In contrast, the respective roles of the two types of chloride cells observed in freshwater fishes are still to be determined.
为了阐明诸如虹鳟等对海水生活适应性较差的淡水鱼类中辅助细胞的功能意义,我们在两种狭盐性淡水鱼——泥鳅和 gudgeon 中寻找此类细胞。在这些物种中从未发现辅助细胞;但相反,始终观察到两种类型的氯细胞,它们与先前在孔雀鱼(一种适应淡水的广盐性鱼类)中描述的α细胞和β细胞极为相似。α细胞是一种浅色且细长的氯细胞,位于次级鳃小片基部,与动脉间支柱毛细血管紧密接触。颜色较深的卵形氯细胞类似于β细胞,仅在初级上皮面对中央静脉窦的板间区域发现。后一种细胞经常形成通过深而窄的顶端连接连接在一起的多细胞复合体。在另一个实验中,一种狭盐性海水鱼——大菱鲆,被适应于稀释的 5%盐水和淡水。在海水中,鳃上皮仅含有一种类型的氯细胞,总是与辅助细胞相关联。由于辅助细胞与氯细胞顶端部分之间存在大量细胞质交错,浅顶端连接的长度显著增加,封闭了两种细胞类型之间的细胞间隙。在 5%盐水中,这些交错的数量减少,浅顶端连接的长度随之减少。在淡水中,氯细胞被改良的辅助细胞部分或完全与外部介质隔开。因此得出结论,辅助细胞仅在生活在海水或预先适应海水的鱼类中发现,并且它们可能参与离子排泄的细胞旁途径的形成和调节。相比之下,在淡水鱼中观察到的两种类型氯细胞各自的作用仍有待确定。