Abstract

The integumental melanophores of Australina lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, were examined by light and electron microscopy and found to possess essentially the same structural characteristics observed in other vertebrates. The epidermal melanophores are located in the intermediate epidermis and possess round perikarya and slender dendrites extending into nearby intercellular spaces. The dermal melanophores are found immediately below the basement membrane as well as in the deeper dermis. These cells possess flattened nuclei and dendrites running parallel to the basement membrane. Each melanophore contains numerous oval or elliptical, intensely electron-dense melanosomes, relatively large mitochondria, systems of vacuolar endoplasmic reticulum, groups of free RNP particles, and some microfilaments. Only a few, short microtubules could be demonstrated in the perinuclear cytoplasm of the dermal melanophore, while a relatively large number of late premelanosomes are found both in perikarya and dendritic processes of epidermal melanophores. These premelanosomes exhibit a particulate internal structure in cross section. Both melanosomes and premelanosomes occur singly in the cytoplasm of epidermal cells, thereby confirming the existence of the epidermal melanin unit in the lowest vertebrates thus far examined electron microscopically.

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