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The Biological Bulletin, Vol 191, Issue 2 168-177, Copyright © 1996 by Marine Biological Laboratory
DEVELOPMENT AND REPRODUCTION |
J. E. Frick and E. E. Ruppert
Department of Biological Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina 29634-1903
The primordial germ cells (PGCs) of a recently metamorphosed juvenile Synaptula hydriformis occur with somatic cells in the germinal epithelium of the gonad. As part of the epithelium, PGCs rest on a basal lamina, extend apically towards a lumen, are joined to other cells of the epithelium via apicolateral junctions, and express apical-basal polarity. Each PGC has an apical flagellum that is surrounded by a collar of microvilli. The apicolateral junctions of PGCs consist of apical adhering and subapical septate junctions. Hemidesmosomes attach the PGCs to the basal lamina. Although the somatic cells form an incomplete layer over the PGCs, both the PGCs and somatic cells remain exposed to the apical lumen and retain contact with the basal lamina. The peritoneum is the outermost layer of the gonad and faces the perivisceral coelom. The epithelial-cell characteristics expressed by cells of the peritoneum are identical to those of the germinal epithelium. PGCs of S. hydriformis are epithelial flagellated-collar cells and express the apical-basal polarity that is typical of epithelial cells. The apical-basal polarity of the oocyte, animal-vegetal axis of full-grown eggs, and anterior-posterior axis of larvae and adults are all in correspondence. Thus the polarity of the germinal epithelium may determine the primary body axis of the next generation.
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