نتایج جستجو برای: melanophores

تعداد نتایج: 483  

2014
Shyh-Chi Chen R. Meldrum Robertson Craig W. Hawryshyn

Migratory species experience morphological and physiological changes during transitions between different life stages. In particular, modification of sensory systems is critical for animals to adapt to new environments. For example, to prepare for entry into seawater, salmonids undergo smoltification with dramatic changes in ultraviolet photoreceptors and polarized vision, which are important f...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1932

Journal: :Microscopy research and technique 2002
Ian K Quigley David M Parichy

The zebrafish Danio rerio is an emerging model organism for understanding vertebrate development and genetics. One trait of both historical and recent interest is the pattern formed by neural crest-derived pigment cells, or chromatophores, which include black melanophores, yellow xanthophores, and iridescent iridophores. In zebrafish, an embryonic and early larval pigment pattern consists of se...

Journal: :Vision Research 2002
Jason Q Ren William R McCarthy Hongwei Zhang Alan R Adolph Lei Li

Zebrafish possess three classes of chromatophores that include iridophores, melanophores, and xanthophores. Mutations that lack one or two classes of chromatophores have been isolated or genetically constructed. Using a behavioral assay based on visually mediated escape responses, we measured the visual response of fully and partially pigmented zebrafish. In zebrafish that lack iridophores (roy...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1936
R G Harrison

Abramowitz, A. A., "Regeneration of Chromatophore Nerves," Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 21, 137-141 (1935). Mills, S. M., "The Double Innervation of Fish Melanophores," Jour. Exp. Zool., 64, 231-244 (1932). Smith, D. C., "The Action of Certain Autonomic Drugs upon the Pigmentary Responses of Fundulus," Ibid., 58, 423-453 (1931). Wyman, L. C., "Blood and Nerve as Controlling Agents in the Movements of...

Journal: :Bioscience reports 2004
Charlotte Immerstrand Harriet M Nilsson Margaretha Lindroth Tommy Sundqvist Karl-Eric Magnusson Kajsa Holmgren Peterson

Melanophores are pigment cells found in the skin of lower vertebrates. The brownish-black pigment melanin is stored in organelles called melanosomes. In response to different stimuli, the cells can redistribute the melanosomes, and thereby change colour. During melanosome aggregation, a height increase has been observed in fish and frog melanophores across the cell centre. The mechanism by whic...

A. Bani M. Toorchi N. Norouzi

This study was conducted to examine morphometric and meristic characteristics alongside pigmentation patterns of bream larvae, Abramis brama orientalis, in four stages of larval development. Morphological characters including total length (TL), standard length (SL), notochord length (NL), head length (HL), head depth (HD), eye diameter (ED) and mouth width (MW) were examined from hatching time ...

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2015
Moritz Kneipp Héctor Estrada Antonella Lauri Jake Turner Vasilis Ntziachristos Gil G. Westmeyer Daniel Razansky

Unveiling mechanisms driving specification, recruitment and regeneration of melanophores is key in understanding melanin-related disorders. This study reports on the applicability of a hybrid focus optoacoustic microscope (HFOAM) for volumetric tracking of migratory melanophores in developing zebrafish. The excellent contrast from highly-absorbing melanin provided by the method is shown to be i...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1994
K J Kotz M A McNiven

Teleost pigment cells (erythrophores and melanophores) are useful models for studying the regulation of rapid, microtubule-dependent organelle transport. Previous studies suggest that melanophores regulate the direction of pigment movements via changes in intracellular cAMP (Rozdzial and Haimo, 1986a; Sammak et al., 1992), whereas erythrophores may use calcium- (Ca(2+)-) based regulation (Luby-...

Journal: :Developmental biology 1996
D M Parichy

In many species of salamanders, pigment cells derived from the neural crest give rise to a horizontal stripe pattern in hatchling larvae. A defining element of these horizontal stripe patterns is a region over the middle of the myotomes that is relatively free of melanophores. This study shows that formation of a "melanophore-free region" and horizontal stripe pattern in Ambystoma tigrinum tigr...

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