Abstract

The larval epidermis of the colonial ascidian Distaplia occidentalis is a unilayered epithelium consisting of squamous and cuboidal or low columnar cells. The epidermal cells are laterally folded and interdigitated or overlapped. The occluding (tight) junctions and the close (gap) junctions that join the epidermal cells have been examined by transmission electron microscopy. In thin sections, the occluding junction is represented by focal fusions of the apposed plasmalemmata. Freeze-fracture replicas of the occluding junction show linear, anastomosing arrays of intramembranous particles on the protoplasmic faces of the cellular membranes. In thin sections of the close junction, the apposed plasmalemmata are mutually parallel and separated by a narrow intercellular cleft. Freeze-fracture replicas of the close junction reveal macular aggregations of intramembranous particles on the protoplasmic faces of the cellular membranes.

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