Really a “secondary gill under the skin”? Unveiling “dorsal vessels” in freshwater slugs (Mollusca, Panpulmonata, Acochlidimorpha)

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Journal of Morphology Pub Date : 2023-10-18 DOI:10.1002/jmor.21653
Timea P. Neusser, Bastian Brenzinger, Michael Schrödl, Katharina M. Jörger
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Abstract

The freshwater slugs of the genus Acochlidium (Heterobranchia, Gastropoda, and Acochlidimorpha) are peculiar, one to two centimeter sized animals found only in small coastal rivers and streams of Southeast Asian and Western Pacific islands. When first described by Bücking, the author observed a branching “net of dendritic vessels connected to the heart,” which he assumed to have replaced the original gastropod gill. In the present study, we compare the renopericardial systems of four Acochlidium species in microanatomical, histological and ultrastructural detail and identify where exactly the enigmatic, subepidermal “dorsal vessels” connect to the renopericardial system to examine if they can really function as a gill. Acochlidium have elaborate renopericardial systems compared to their ancestrally marine and also freshwater relatives. The primary site of ultrafiltration is the epicardium of the atrium with podocytes as usual for gastropods. The “dorsal vessels” in Acochlidium are extensions of the outer epithelium of the pericardial cavity and represent true vessels, that is, coelomatic channels, having an endothelium with podocytes. Hence, they considerably enlarge the site of ultrafiltration increasing the pericardial surface. “Dorsal vessels” in Acochlidium are therefore not homologous to externally similar morphological structures in Sacoglossa (marine panpulmonate slugs and snails). The multiplication of renopericardioducts in Acochlidium is a unique feature within Mollusca that enhances the negative pressure necessary for ultrafiltration in the thin, tube-like dorsal vessels and as a consequence the transport of primary urine from the pericardium to the kidney. The circulatory and excretory systems in Acochlidium are adaptations to a lifestyle in their freshwater environment in which snail bodies are hyposmotic and accrue considerable influx of surplus water into the body, which needs to be expelled.

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真的是“皮下次级鳃”吗?揭开淡水蛞蝓的“背血管”(软体动物、肺科动物、Acochlidimorpa)。
Acochlidium属(异鳃目、腹足目和Acochlidimorpa)的淡水蛞蝓是一种奇特的、一到两厘米大小的动物,只在东南亚和西太平洋岛屿的小型沿海河流和溪流中发现。当Bücking首次描述时,作者观察到一个分支“连接到心脏的树突血管网”,他认为它取代了原来的腹足纲鳃。在本研究中,我们从微观解剖学、组织学和超微结构的细节上比较了四种石菖蒲的肾心包系统,并确定了神秘的表皮下“背血管”与肾心包的确切连接位置,以检查它们是否真的能起到鳃的作用。与它们的祖先海洋和淡水亲缘关系相比,乌头具有复杂的肾心包系统。超滤的主要部位是心房的心外膜,足细胞通常是腹足类动物的足细胞。Acochlidium中的“背侧血管”是心包腔外上皮的延伸,代表真正的血管,即体腔通道,具有带足细胞的内皮。因此,它们大大扩大了超滤部位,增加了心包表面。因此,Acochlidium中的“背血管”与Sacoglossa(海洋全肺蛞蝓和蜗牛)的外部相似形态结构不同源。Acochlidium中肾心包产物的增殖是软体动物的一个独特特征,它增强了在细管状背血管中进行超滤所需的负压,从而使初级尿液从心包输送到肾脏。Acochlidium的循环和排泄系统适应了淡水环境中的生活方式,在淡水环境中,蜗牛的身体运动不足,大量多余的水涌入体内,需要排出。
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来源期刊
Journal of Morphology
Journal of Morphology 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
119
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Morphology welcomes articles of original research in cytology, protozoology, embryology, and general morphology. Articles generally should not exceed 35 printed pages. Preliminary notices or articles of a purely descriptive morphological or taxonomic nature are not included. No paper which has already been published will be accepted, nor will simultaneous publications elsewhere be allowed. The Journal of Morphology publishes research in functional, comparative, evolutionary and developmental morphology from vertebrates and invertebrates. Human and veterinary anatomy or paleontology are considered when an explicit connection to neontological animal morphology is presented, and the paper contains relevant information for the community of animal morphologists. Based on our long tradition, we continue to seek publishing the best papers in animal morphology.
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