Abstract
The caudal end of the neural tube of the tunicate Oikopleura, the cephalochordate Branchiostoma and newly hatched fry of the clupeiform teleosts Clupea, Engraulis and Sardinops was studied by means of the electron microscope. In Oikopleura and the teleost larvae either Reissner's fiber or an amorphous mass of fiber substance leaks out of the neural tube into the surrounding tissue spaces. In Branchiostoma the disintegrated fiber material is apparently engulfed by the caudal ependymal cells. A relationship seems to exist between the degree of fiber disintegration within the neural tube and the degree of specialization of the caudal neural tube ependymal cells, the two extremes being represented by Branchiostoma with a “closed” Reissner's fiber system with highly specialized caudal ependymal cells and a teleost fry with the intact fiber leaving the neural tube between almost undifferentiated ependymal cells. These observations on lower chordates are in accordance with the hypothesis that Reissner's fiber acts as a detoxicator for the neural tube fluid.
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