THE FINE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE TENTACLE IN TOKOPHRYA INFUSIONUM
Open Access
- 1 June 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 25 (3), 459-477
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.25.3.459
Abstract
The feeding apparatus of Suctoria consists of long, thin, stiff tubes called tentacles. When a swimming prey attaches to the tip of the tentacle a number of events follow in rapid succession. The tentacle broadens, a stream of tiny granules starts to move upward at its periphery to the tip, the prey becomes immobilized and shortly thereafter the cytoplasm of the still living prey begins to flow through the center of the tentacle to the body of the predator. An electron microscope study of the tentacle in Tokophrya infusionum, a protozoan of the subclass Suctoria, has disclosed a number of structural details which help to clarify some of the mechanisms involved in this unusual way of feeding. Each tentacle is composed of two concentric tubes. The lumen of the inner tube is surrounded by 49 tubular fibrils most probably of contractile nature. In the inner tube the cytoplasm of the prey is present during feeding, and in the outer tube are small dense bodies. It was found that the dense bodies originate in the cytoplasm of Tokophrya. They have an elongate, missile-like appearance, pointed at one end, rounded at the other, and are composed of several distinct segments. At the tip of the tentacle they penetrate the plasma membrane, with their pointed ends sticking out. It is assumed that the missile-like bodies play a major role in the feeding process. Their composite structure suggests that they might contain a number of enzymes which most probably are responsible for the various events preceding the actual food intake.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- STUDIES ON THE PROTEIN COMPONENTS OF CILIA FROM TETRAHYMENA PYRIFORMISProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1963
- CYTOPLASMIC MICROTUBULESThe Journal of cell biology, 1963
- SIMPLE METHODS FOR "STAINING WITH LEAD" AT HIGH pH IN ELECTRON MICROSCOPYThe Journal of cell biology, 1961
- Observations on the kinetoplast-mitochondrion and the cytostome of BodoExperimental Cell Research, 1961
- IMPROVEMENTS IN EPOXY RESIN EMBEDDING METHODSThe Journal of cell biology, 1961
- An Electron Microscope Study of the Contractile Vacuole in Tokophrya infusionum The Journal of cell biology, 1958
- Electron microscope study of intact tentacles and disc inTokophrya infusionumCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1954
- THE NUTRITION OF CARNIVOROUS PROTOZOAAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1953
- OBSERVATIONS ON A SUBMICROSCOPIC BASOPHILIC COMPONENT OF CYTOPLASMThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1953
- A STUDY OF FIXATION FOR ELECTRON MICROSCOPYThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1952