Abstract

Light and electron microscopic examination of the midgut of Manduca sexta has shown that the organization of this tissue is more complex than was originally believed. The midgut can be divided into anterior, middle and posterior regions on the basis of the pattern of folding of the epithelial sheet, and variations in the structure of goblet and columnar cells which occur along its length. The columnar cells show gradual structural changes from the anterior to the posterior end of the midgut. For example, the microvilli in the anterior region form a dense, interconnecting network from which vesicles break off. This organization becomes less obvious through the middle region, until by the posterior region each microvillus is unconnected to adjacent microvilli along its entire length and vesicles are no longer produced. Two distinct types of goblet cells are found. In the anterior and middle regions the goblet cells have a large basally located cavity, but in the posterior region the cavity occupies only the apical half of the cell. In both cases the cavity is formed by invagination of the apical membrane, which is studded with small particles implicated in active ion transport. In the anterior and middle regions this membrane is closely associated with mitochondria, but not in the posterior region. The significance of the observed structural differences is discussed in relation to active ion transport.

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