Fine Structure of Heart, Pericardium and Glomerular Vessel in Cephalodiscus gracilis M'Intosh, 1882 (Pterobranchia, Hemichordata)
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Heart, pericardium and glomerular vessel of Cephalodiscus gracilis have been studied with the electron microscope. The lumen of the heart is lined by a basal lamina and an associated epithelium, composed of myoepithelial cells with well developed thin and thick myofilaments. The heart is located in the pericardial cavity, which is deliminated by the pericardium. The latter is composed of two flat layers of myoepithelia with fused basal laminae. The outer layer of the pericardium is the protocoelomic lining, and the inner layer is the ‘parietal’ pericardial epithelium. The myoepithelium forming the heart wall can be considered to represent the ‘visceral’ pericardial epithelium. The spacious glomerular vessel is lined by a basal lamina, on which typical podocytes rest. These cells indicate that ultrafiltration takes place through the wall of the glomerular vessel. The lumen of the vessel contains fine granular material (presumably precipitated blood proteins), fibrils with a faint cross striation, suggesting that they represent collagen, and stellate cells, which in part line the vessel. Since ultrafiltration requires hydrostatic pressure, it is inferred that the blood flow is from the dorsal region then through the heart and into the glomerular vessel.
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