Bever M M, Borgens R B
Department of Anatomy, School of Veterinary Medicine, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907.
J Exp Zool. 1988 Jan;245(1):43-52. doi: 10.1002/jez.1402450107.
Immediately following amputation through the eyestalk of the mystery snail (Pomacea), a persistent ionic current enters the apical amputation surface of the eyestalk stump. The circuit is completed by current driven from undamaged integument of the eyestalk stump and other body regions. The current is relatively steady during the first 10 hours following amputation. Currents subsequently begin a slow decline to base line levels by 60 hours postamputation--a time coincident with wound healing processes. The "battery" driving this ionic current is the internally negative transepidermal potential existing across the snail integument--perhaps the result of a net inward pumping of chloride across the skin. This system is compared to other regeneration models such as the amphibian limb, bone fracture repair, and skin wound healing. We suggest that ionic current may be a control of eye regeneration in the snail.
在对神秘螺(福寿螺属)的眼柄进行截肢后,立即有持续的离子电流进入眼柄残端的顶端截肢表面。该电路由来自眼柄残端和身体其他部位未受损外皮驱动的电流完成。截肢后的前10小时内,电流相对稳定。随后,电流在截肢后60小时开始缓慢下降至基线水平,这一时期与伤口愈合过程一致。驱动这种离子电流的“电池”是蜗牛外皮上存在的内部负跨表皮电位,这可能是氯离子通过皮肤向内净泵出的结果。该系统与其他再生模型进行了比较,如两栖动物肢体、骨折修复和皮肤伤口愈合。我们认为离子电流可能是蜗牛眼睛再生的一种控制因素。