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Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, Vol s2-81, 595-617, Copyright © 1940 by Company of Biologists

Memoirs: The Golgi Apparatus and Pyrenoids of Chilomonas paramecium, with remarks on the Identification of Copromonas subtilis

J. BRONTÉ GATENBY 1 and J. D. SMYTH 2

1 Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy
2 Senior Exhibitioner and Scholar, Trinity College, Dublin

1. In Chilomonas paramecium the contractile vacuole is surrounded by a cortical substance (Golgi apparatus) which has the power of reducing osmium tetroxide solution and thus impregnating black (Nassonow).

2. This cortex blackens thus in over 99 per cent, of individuals in a culture which has not been dividing. In a culture in which the individuals have been rapidly dividing, the percentage of unimpregnated contractile vacnoles increases considerably, up to about 5 per cent.

3. During division of Chilomonas in about 70 per cent. of cases the osmiophile substance is very equally divided between the daughter cells. The dividing cortex comes away from the contractile vacuole, which eventually collapses, new contractile vacuoles arising in the site of the divided osmiophile material. In about 25 per cent, of division stages osmication of the cortex fails to a greater or lesser degree. There is always a very distinct tendency for this failure to take place even in the best of preparations.

4. In some cases (about 3 per cent.), during division, the entire contractile vacuole and its cortex goes over whole to one individual. A new vaeuole, apparently without cortex, arises spontaneously in the other individual. It is unlikely that all of these cases are due to failure of impregnation in one of the individuals, though this possibility cannot be roled out completely.

5. The behaviour of the original contractile vacuole cavity before separation of the daughter cells is as follows. The lipoid, having partially retreated from the vacuole, becomes separated into two parts, and the centrally placed vacuole disappears (figs. 4 and 6, Pl. 36; figs. 10 and 15, Pl. 37). New vacuoles appear in the site of the lipoid bodies in each daughter cell (fig. 5, Pl. 36).

6. Two ellipsoidal accessory bodies or pyrenoids lie on a level with the vestibule. In older cultures the two bodies are often exactly the same size and colour (corrosive osmic followed by neutral red or haematoxylin), but in rapidly dividing cultures, one body may be of normal size, whereas the other may be absent or much smaller. During cell division, one body is carried across to each daughter. No exception to this was ever found.

7. Identification of the smaller Peranemidae is in a confused state. Probably several species, and possibly even genera, have been described by various authors as Scytomonas (Copromonas) subtilis.







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1940