4.2 Article

Ultrastructural characterization of the putative defensive glands (warts) in the sessile, colonial rotifer Sinantherina socialis (Gnesiotrocha; Flosculariidae)

Journal

ZOOLOGISCHER ANZEIGER
Volume 304, Issue -, Pages 10-20

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcz.2023.03.001

Keywords

Defense; Freshwater; Invertebrate; Predator; Prey; Unpalatable

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In this study, the ultrastructure and cytochemistry of the warts in female Sinantherina socialis were explored to determine their function and chemical contents. The results showed that the warts are specialized regions of the integumental syncytium and contain numerous membrane-bound secretion vesicles. The vesicles likely contain saturated fatty acids such as lactones, which may act as a chemical deterrent to predators.
Female Sinantherina socialis are freshwater, sessile, colonial rotifers that possess two pairs of distinctive glands (warts) located below the corona. Previous studies demonstrated that colonies are unpalatable to many inver-tebrate and vertebrate predators; those authors suggested that the warts were a possible source of a chemical deterrent to predation. Here we explore wart ultrastructure and cytochemisty to determine whether the warts function as exocrine glands and if their contents display any allomone-like chemistry, respectively. Externally, the warts appear as elevated bulges without pores. Internally, the warts are specialized regions of the integ-umental syncytium and therefore acellular. The lipid stain Nile Red labels all four warts. Two lipid membrane probes (sphingomyelin and phosphatidylinositol) also bind the warts and may be staining internal secretion vesicle membranes. In fact, wart ultrastructure is defined by hundreds of membrane-bound secretion vesicles packed tightly together. The vesicles are mostly electron-lucent and crowded into a well-defined cytoplasmic space. The cytoplasm also contains abundant ribosomes, rough endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and Golgi, but nuclei are generally positioned peripheral to the packed vesicles. Absence of muscles around the warts or any signs of direct innervation suggests expulsion of gland contents is forced by general body contraction. A single specimen with 'empty' warts implies that secretions are released en masse from all glands simultaneously. The identity of the chemical secretion remains to be determined, but the lack of osmium and uranyl acetate staining suggests a low abundance or absence of phenols, unsaturated lipids, or NH2 and -COOH groups. This absence, combined with the positive Nile Red staining, is interpreted as evidence that vesicles contain saturated fatty acids such as lactones that are unpalatable to predators.

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