RNA containing yolk nuclei from the surf clam Spisula solidissima have been studied with the light microscope and with the electron microscope. A variety of structures can be seen with both and a correlation can be made between bodies studied with the electron microscope and those studied with the light microscope. The electron microscope shows many of these structures to be composed of double walled lamellae arranged in space, in various ways. The variety of patterns seen with the electron microscope can be satisfactorily explained on the basis of a hypothetical model. The presence of yolk platelets within the yolk nuclei lends support to classical observations on the synthesis of yolk within yolk nuclei or yolk nuclei derivatives. Small granules (about 100 A) are included within the double walled lamellae and their presence probably accounts for the basophilic nature of the entire body. The presence of small granules attached to electron-dense layers relates the yolk nuclei described here to ergastoplasm discussed by others.
Article|
March 25 1956
ELECTRON MICROSCOPY OF BASOPHILIC STRUCTURES OF SOME INVERTEBRATE OOCYTES : II. FINE STRUCTURE OF THE YOLK NUCLEI
Lionel I. Rebhun
Lionel I. Rebhun
From the Whitman Laboratories, Department of Zoology, The University of Chicago, Chicago
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Lionel I. Rebhun
From the Whitman Laboratories, Department of Zoology, The University of Chicago, Chicago
Received:
December 01 1955
Copyright, 1956, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
1956
J Biophys and Biochem Cytol (1956) 2 (2): 159–170.
Article history
Received:
December 01 1955
Citation
Lionel I. Rebhun; ELECTRON MICROSCOPY OF BASOPHILIC STRUCTURES OF SOME INVERTEBRATE OOCYTES : II. FINE STRUCTURE OF THE YOLK NUCLEI . J Biophys and Biochem Cytol 25 March 1956; 2 (2): 159–170. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.2.2.159
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