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Electron-microscopical study of the operculum in anuran tadpole after extirpation of the right forelimb during metamorphosis

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Summary

The process of histolysis and fenestration of the skin of the prospective opercular perforation region of Rana japonica after extirpation of the right forelimb was observed during metamorphosis by transmission and scanning electron microscopy.

Epidermal cells of the belly of the tadpole, including the operculum, are extremely similar in their ultrastructure. Epidermal cells of the prospective opercular perforation region during metamorphosis become thin and vacuolated especially around the nucleus perhaps by autolysis, associated with lysosomal activity. The histolysis and formation of the perforation of the operculum occurs in the complete absence of forelimb. Macrophages containing phagosomes and lymphocytes or other blood cells are almost always found in the intercellular epidermis. Necrotic epidermal cells progressively separate by cleft formation and slough off without cornification.

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Send offprint requests to: Department of Biology, School of Dental Medicine, Tsurumi University, 2-1-3 Tsurumi, Tsurumi-ku, Yokohama, 230 Japan

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Sasaki, F., Takahama, H., Horiguchi, T. et al. Electron-microscopical study of the operculum in anuran tadpole after extirpation of the right forelimb during metamorphosis. Cell Tissue Res. 232, 513–527 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00216425

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