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An elastase-like proteinase was localized histochemically in the penetration glands of the cercariae of Neoglyphe sobolevi. The enzyme extracted from the larvae hydrolyzed azocoll, gelatin, azoalbumin, azocasein, and elastin-orcein at optimal pH of 8.4, 8.4, 8.0, 7.6, and 8.4, respectively. The nonionic detergent Triton X-100 slightly enhanced its activity toward azocoll, whereas the anionic detergent SDS, and the cationic detergent cetyltrimethylammonium bromide acted as strong inhibitors. Magnesium ions stabilized the proteinase activity. Strong calcium and magnesium chelators (EGTA, EDTA) and the serine proteinase inhibitor DFP (0.1 mM) inhibited it. 2 mM 1,10-phenanthroline, a relatively specific chelator of zinc, produced a weak inhibition. The results indicate, therefore, that the active proteinase represents a metal-enzyme complex rather than a metalloenzyme. Being capable of hydrolyzing N-blocked L-alanine-1-naphthylester, N-blocked L-methionine-1-naphthylester, and naphthyl AS-D chloroacetate at pH 6.8, the proteinase activity was insensitive to 1 mM p-nitrophenyl phosphate, an inhibitor of some mammalian esterproteinases. The enzyme did not split N-blocked-DL-phenylalanine-2-naphthylester and also N-blocked L-aminoacyl- and N-blocked L-peptidyl-naphthylamides bearing L-arginine, L-alanine, L-phenylalanine, L-leucine, or L-proline at the P₁ subsite. At operative pH values of 4.8 and 3.5 generated during electrophoresis in a stacking and a resolving gel, respectively, the cercarial proteinase migrated toward the cathode. The separated enzyme produced four bands of proteolysis in a gelatin-containing polyacrylamide gel, at the optimal pH of 8.4.
Skin and hair samples taken from seven body areas of a winter hair coat of a male and a female yearling white-tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus Zimmerman, 1780 were investigated morphologically. The color, length, diameter, density and relative proportion of guard and wooly hair was determined from the histological sections. In addition, the epidermal thickness, and the shape, density, location and structure of sebaceous and sudoriferous glands were also determined .A reciprocal relationship was found between the insulation values of the pelage, the epidermal thickness and the amount of either gland. The areas known to provide the best insulation (the tail and the belly) exhibited the thinnest epidermis, the highest density of hair and the highest concentration of sebaceous glands. In reverse, the region with the lowest insulation capacity (the leg) exhibits the thickest epidermis, the lowest hair density and the highest amount of sudoriferous glands.
Stages in the assembly of the egg in the monogenean skin parasite Entobdella soleae have been studied using a fast preservation technique for transmission electron microscopy. The first event is the release by the germarium of a fertilised oocyte, which travels to the ootype followed by many vitelline cells. There are two types of Mehlis' gland and the secretion from one of these (beta) is thought to promote the release of the vitelline droplets, which fuse peripherally in the distal tetrahedral chamber of the ootype to produce the eggshell. Initially, the zygote lodges in the distal corner of the chamber, perhaps held in place by cortical granule material, and prevents shell deposition in this corner. However, this is temporary, and when the zygote leaves the corner the opercular eggshell is laid down. The egg appendage is assembled in the proximal tubular part of the ootype and the adhesive droplets on the appendage are derived from the second (alpha) type of Mehlis' secretion.
An ultrastructural study has been made of the egg assembly apparatus of the monopisthocotylean monogenean skin parasites Entobdella soleae and E. hippoglossi from the common sole, Solea solea, and the halibut, Hippoglossus hippoglossus, respectively. The ootype consists of a distal tetrahedral chamber where the egg capsule is assembled and a proximal ootype tube where the egg appendage is made. Two types of Mehlis' gland (alpha and beta) open at the proximal end of the ootype tube, which has a non-secretory lining. In both species, the tetrahedral ootype chamber has a syncytial lining, which apparently is not secretory and possesses on its luminal surface stud-like projections, each with vacuolated cytoplasm and an electron-dense core. The ootype chamber is enclosed by a single layer of muscle fibres and is embedded in a spongy "connective tissue". The uterus in E. soleae has a cellular secretory lining, with densely packed luminal microvilli.
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