BACKGROUND: In fish embryogenesis, the yolk sac is the critical provisional organ, actively functioning during the embryonic and early postembryonic stages. Its primary role is trophic, facilitated in Teleostei by a specialized structure — the yolk syncytial layer (YSL). Ultrastructural transformations of this layer during gastrulation and early postembryonic development, as well as its interaction with migrating muscle fibers and melanophores, are probably necessary for the efficient use of nutrients by the developing embryo. The yolk sac’s role in the embryogenesis of Hemichromis bimaculatus may extend beyond current conceptions.
AIM: To study the structural organization of the Jewel Cichlid (H. bimaculatus) yolk sac during the embryonic and early postembryonic development.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The research was involved 22 embryos and larvae of H. bimaculatus from 1 to 7 days after egg laying. The morphological features of the yolk sac were studied using light and transmission electron microscopy.
RESULTS: By day 2, the yolk sac was separated from the embryo by the trunk fold. Its main structure was the YSL, containing numerous nuclei, microvilli, mitochondria and phagolysosomes. The morphological features of the YSL were similar to those of the placental symplastotrophoblast and indicated high functional activity. The yolk sac mesenchyme contained blood vessels, migrating melanophores, and muscle fibers. The periderm, covered with a special shell, fuunctioned as the primary skin of the embryo. The transition to exogenous nutrition in Jewel Cichlid larvae was accompanied by a significant decrease in yolk sac size with its subsequent involution.
CONCLUSIONS: The trophic function of the yolk sac in H. bimaculatus is mediated by the YSL, which, during gastrulation and postembryonic development, interacts with a number of structures present in the yolk sac wall. Migrating muscle fibers promote activation of yolk granules; accumulation of toxic metabolic products is associated with melanophores. The special structure of the periderm protects both the yolk sac and the embryo from external influences.