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Zurbrigg, R.E. and F.W.H Beamish, 1995. Thy-1 Immunoreactivity in Larval Sea Lamprey
(Petromyzon marinus L.), a Vertebrate Without a Definitive Thymus, University
of Guelph.
Reprinted from Canadian Journal of Zoology (1995) 73(1): 188-97
Thy-1 Immunoreactivity in Larval Sea Lamprey (Petromyzon marinus L.),
a Vertebrate Without a Definitive Thymus
Abstract:
Agnathans are the only vertebrates without a thymus, yet lampreys possess putative
lymphocytes whose responses parallel those of T cells in gnathostomes. The
phylogenetically conserved Thy-l antigen is often associated with the thymus, thymocytes,
and T cells. An immunohistochemical study, using commercial anti-rat brain Thy- 1.1
antiserum and an immunoperoxidase procedure (peroxidase anti-peroxidase) was conducted to
identify any Thy-l antigenicity in various tissues of larval sea lampreys (Petromyzon marinus L.) lightly fixed in a chilled
aldehyde-based solution. The primary focus of the experiment was to discover if Thy-l
immunoreactivity was associated with haemopoietic sites and (or) leukocytes. This
technique permitted conventional hi1lological sectioning, preserved tissue architecture,
and retained Thy-l antigenicity. In the haemopoietic typhlosole, the peripheral stroma and
many lymphocyte-like cells stained intensely, as did similar cells in the opisthonephros,
intestinal venous sinus, and liver. Immunoreactivity in the pharynx was evidenced only by
weakly staining stroma in small labyrinthine subdermal foci dorsal and ventral to some
external gill openings. It is proposed that if functions analogous to thymic activities
exist in the larval lamprey, the typhlosole is the most likely site for their discovery.
Entire Paper
Contact: Bill Beamish, University of Guelph, Department of Zoology, Guelph,
ON N1G 2W1, CANADA
Keywords: Sea_lamprey, Basic_biology
Product Type: Research, Basic_biology
User Type: General
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