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ULTRASTRUCTURE OF THE FEEDING APPARATUS AND MYONEMAL SYSTEM OF THE HETEROTROPHIC DINOFLAGELLATE PROTOPERIDINIUM SPINULOSUM 1
Author(s) -
Jacobson Dean M.,
Anderson Donald M.
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
journal of phycology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1529-8817
pISSN - 0022-3646
DOI - 10.1111/j.0022-3646.1992.00069.x
Subject(s) - dinoflagellate , biology , ultrastructure , nematocyst , electron microscope , biophysics , anatomy , peduncle (anatomy) , botany , ecology , cnidaria , physics , coral , optics
The feeding veil or pallium of the thecate heterotrophic dinoflagellate Protoperidinium spinulosum Schiller is a highly vesiculate membranous sac containing several arched, sometimes bifurcated microtubular ribbons. It originates from an internal microtubular basket, passes through a sphincter‐like osmiophilic ring located inside the posterior flagellar pore, and emerges from the cell at that pore. The osmiophilic ring is part of an interconnected myonemal system (composed of two striated collars and several striated connectives) that is anchored to the pore plate and to two inward protrusions composed of minute sulcal plates. A related species, Protoperidinium punctulatum (Paulsen) Balech, also possesses a microtubular basket/osmiophilic ring complex. Elongate electron‐dense bodies within the basket resemble digestive secretory granules found in other protists. Granular, electron‐lucent microbodies clustered at the anterior end of the basket may also have a role in prey digestion. Dense membranous whorls observed within a P. spinulosum cell presented as it was preparing to initiate feeding indicate a condensed storage site for pallium membranes. A narrow microtubule‐strengthened pseudopodal appendage found in two non‐feeding cells constitutes the tow filament that serves as the initial linkage between the dinoflagellate and its food. The structures that constitute the pallium and pallium precursors, described here for the first time, are unlike those of other known protists, although some similarities with the dinoflagellate peduncle are evident. The existence of this unique system of organelles may have important ramifications in the search for evolutionary relationships among protists.