A daily cycle of apocrine secretion by the B cells in the hepatopancreas of terrestrial isopods

Abstract
The ultrastructure of the two cell types of the hepatopancreas of the terrestrial isopods Oniscus asellus and Porcellio scaber was examined at hourly intervals in animals habituated to a 16 h light: 8 h dark cycle. The ultrastructure of the B cells undergoes substantial changes which are repeated every 24 h. This 'B cell cycle' can be divided into two stages. During the first, 'extrusive' stage, which begins about 1 h before the onset of the light period, the contents of the B cells apical to the nuclei are voided into the lumen of the hepatopancreas. The second, 'restitutive,' stage begins about 10 h after the onset of the light cycle. The B cells swell in size by the accumulation of the new material until the next extrusive stage. The ultrastructural appearance of the S cells was similar at all stages of the daily and moult cycles; they were never observed to void any material into the lumen of the hepatopancreas. The differences between the rates of turnover of the contents of the S and B cells have important implications for understanding the dynamics of accumulation and loss of metal pollutants in terrestrial isopods.