Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)

1. Quantitative estimations and histological methods have been used to determine the presence and distribution of glycogen in fertilized salmon eggs and subsequent stages of development. 2. A check upon the occurrence of glycogen in each sample was obtained by the use of amylase and the presence of...

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Main Author: DANIEL, R. J.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Company of Biologists 1947
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/24/1-2/123
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:jexbio:24/1-2/123 2023-05-15T18:10:01+02:00 Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.) DANIEL, R. J. 1947-09-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/24/1-2/123 en eng Company of Biologists http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/24/1-2/123 Copyright (C) 1947, Company of Biologists Articles TEXT 1947 fthighwire 2013-04-02T07:22:50Z 1. Quantitative estimations and histological methods have been used to determine the presence and distribution of glycogen in fertilized salmon eggs and subsequent stages of development. 2. A check upon the occurrence of glycogen in each sample was obtained by the use of amylase and the presence of glucose as a result of this technique confirmed, in certain large samples, by the formation of phenylglucosazone crystals. 3. Results of estimations agree with the general distribution of glycogen as shown in histological sections. They differ from those of Hayes & Hollett (1940) who, using water extraction, found no glycogen in stages corresponding to stages I and II and only recorded it as doubtfully present in the yolk-sac. 4. In stages I and II glycogen is concentrated in the blastoderm and perivitelline space. Later the main sources are the muscles, liver and yolk-sac envelope. 5. Glycogen is present in embryonic muscle tissue when fibrils are being laid down (stage III). Subsequently it occurs in both sarcoplasm and muscle fibres. 6. Eight days before hatching (stage V) there is strong staining reaction for glycogen in liver cells, and it is present in all later stages. This glycogen is not obtained from engulfed food or from direct absorption of yolk by liver cells. 7. There is histological evidence that yolk is taken up by the yolk-sac blood vessels after absorption by the yolk-sac cells and dermis. This absorption is accompanied by the appearance of glycogen in these cells and in yolk lying adjacent to them. 8. An increase in amounts of glycogen in both embryo and yolk-sac coincides with a rapid absorption of fat which takes place about 20 days after hatching. 9. The presence of glycogen in blastoderm cells, before the gastrula stage, is similar to the condition in developing Aves and Amphibia. This is true, also, for its appearance early in the formation of muscle tissue. Other similarities are the presence of glycogen in the perivitelline fluid of salmon and Amphibia and the manner of its distribution ... Text Salmo salar HighWire Press (Stanford University) Hayes ENVELOPE(-64.167,-64.167,-66.833,-66.833)
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
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language English
topic Articles
spellingShingle Articles
DANIEL, R. J.
Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)
topic_facet Articles
description 1. Quantitative estimations and histological methods have been used to determine the presence and distribution of glycogen in fertilized salmon eggs and subsequent stages of development. 2. A check upon the occurrence of glycogen in each sample was obtained by the use of amylase and the presence of glucose as a result of this technique confirmed, in certain large samples, by the formation of phenylglucosazone crystals. 3. Results of estimations agree with the general distribution of glycogen as shown in histological sections. They differ from those of Hayes & Hollett (1940) who, using water extraction, found no glycogen in stages corresponding to stages I and II and only recorded it as doubtfully present in the yolk-sac. 4. In stages I and II glycogen is concentrated in the blastoderm and perivitelline space. Later the main sources are the muscles, liver and yolk-sac envelope. 5. Glycogen is present in embryonic muscle tissue when fibrils are being laid down (stage III). Subsequently it occurs in both sarcoplasm and muscle fibres. 6. Eight days before hatching (stage V) there is strong staining reaction for glycogen in liver cells, and it is present in all later stages. This glycogen is not obtained from engulfed food or from direct absorption of yolk by liver cells. 7. There is histological evidence that yolk is taken up by the yolk-sac blood vessels after absorption by the yolk-sac cells and dermis. This absorption is accompanied by the appearance of glycogen in these cells and in yolk lying adjacent to them. 8. An increase in amounts of glycogen in both embryo and yolk-sac coincides with a rapid absorption of fat which takes place about 20 days after hatching. 9. The presence of glycogen in blastoderm cells, before the gastrula stage, is similar to the condition in developing Aves and Amphibia. This is true, also, for its appearance early in the formation of muscle tissue. Other similarities are the presence of glycogen in the perivitelline fluid of salmon and Amphibia and the manner of its distribution ...
format Text
author DANIEL, R. J.
author_facet DANIEL, R. J.
author_sort DANIEL, R. J.
title Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)
title_short Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)
title_full Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)
title_fullStr Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of Glycogen in the Developing Salmon (Salmo Salar L.)
title_sort distribution of glycogen in the developing salmon (salmo salar l.)
publisher Company of Biologists
publishDate 1947
url http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/24/1-2/123
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.167,-64.167,-66.833,-66.833)
geographic Hayes
geographic_facet Hayes
genre Salmo salar
genre_facet Salmo salar
op_relation http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/24/1-2/123
op_rights Copyright (C) 1947, Company of Biologists
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