Title
The Gallbladder of the Electric Ray Torpedo Marmorata Risso Deplays Excrescent Cholecystocytes with Merocrine and Apocrine-Like Secretions
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Winter 2013
Abstract
The gallbladder of Torpedo marmorata exhibits a mucosal surface layer of simple columnar epithelium with very tall cholecystocytes. The apical domain of each cell has few microvilli, but many mucous vesicles that are secreted by exocytosis at the cell apices. The apical regions may also elongate and undergo self-excision while shedding mucus and cell debris into the gallbladder lumen in a manner similar to that described in mammals as a result of sex steroid treatment to induce gallstones and to that found in the cholecystitis associated with cholelithiasis. Numerous small mitochondria, spherical to elongated, are distributed throughout the cells, while the nuclei are often located in the lower third of each cell. In the lower part of the cholecystocytes, large and very densely contrasted lysosomes can be found. All cells are tightly joined by junctional complexes, including long, highly contrasted desmosomes. The fibromuscular layer is made of a loose stroma with a limited muscular component and a poor blood supply. Large diameter blood vessels can only be found in the subserosal layer. It is hypothesized that the obligatorily carnivorous diet of this ureotelic fish has resulted in the evolution of a gallbladder ultrastructure resembling that found in cholecystitis but without the associated cholelithiasis.
Publication Title
The Anatomical Record
Volume
296
First Page
79
Last Page
95
Recommended Citation
Ott, Donald; Gilloteaux, J; and Oldham-Ott, Carla K., "The Gallbladder of the Electric Ray Torpedo Marmorata Risso Deplays Excrescent Cholecystocytes with Merocrine and Apocrine-Like Secretions" (2013). Biology Faculty Research. 96.
https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/biology_ideas/96