It has been widely accepted that cyclostomes are the most primitive vertebrates extant with the ability to produce antibodies. We isolated cDNA clones that encode a putative ‘antibody’ from one of the cyclostomes, Eptatretus burgeri. The amino acid sequence predicted from the nucleotide sequences of the cDNA clones indicated that this gene does actually encode the proteins isolated as hagfish ‘antibodies’ by various investigators. However, these proteins are not similar to mammalian immunoglobulins but have some characteristics common to complements C3, C4 and C5 in higher vertebrates. We discuss the relationships of the isolated gene for hagfish complement with the mammalian genes for complements C3, C4 and C5. We also discuss the possibility of the presence of antibodies in cyclostomes.
We identified the presence in the Aleutian skate, Bathyraja aleutica, of two classes of immunoglobulins (Ig), a high molecular weight Ig analogous to mammalian IgM and a low molecular weight Ig, similarly to the spiny rasp skate, Raja kenojei, (Kobayashi, K. et al., Mol. Immunol. 1984. 21: 397), using an immunological cross-reaction with the specific antisera to the spiny rasp skate Ig components. The antigenic similarity of the heavy chains of the Ig of the Aleutian skate and those of the spiny rasp skate was less than that between their light chains. Two types of Ig-producing cells, one producing the high molecular weight and the other forming the low molecular weight Ig, were present in the spleen of embryos and adults in the Aleutian skate at a ratio of 5-6:4-5. The number of these Ig-producing cells increased with advancing development of the embryos but was 1/20 to 1/50 of those of adults. Cells, each of which were capable of forming both classes of Ig, were found in the spleen of embryos but not in that of adults. These results suggested that the spleen of the Aleutian skate is the primary lymphoid organ for B lymphocyte differentiation and proliferation, possibly equivalent to the bursa of birds.
Five types of phagocytes were observed in kuruma prawn Penaeus japonicus.Two of them were fixed phagocytes and three were hemocytes. Fixed phagocytes were detected in the heart and lymphoid organ. Phagocytes in the heart were observed on basal lamina covering sarcolemma of heart muscles and the were detected in all five phagocytic cell types. Esterase activity was higher in the LGC than in any other phagocytes. Peroxidase activity was also detected in all phagocytes, although it was weak. Prophenoloxidase activity was found only in the SGC and LGC. These results indicate that the fixed phagocytes are different from the hemocytes both in their ultrastructural and cytochemical characteristics.
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