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The anatomy of the gastrointestinal tract of the African lungfish, Protopterus annectens

Abstract: The gastrointestinal tract of the African lungfish Protopterus annectens is a composite, which includes the gut, the spleen, and the pancreas. The gut is formed by a short oesophagus, a longitudinal stomach, a pyloric valve, a spiraling intestine, and a cloaca. Coiling of the intestine begins dorsally below the pylorus, winding down to form six complete turns before ending into the cloaca. A reticular tissue of undisclosed nature accompanies the winding of the intestinal mucosa. The spleen is located along the right side of the stomach, overlapping the cranial end of the pancreas. The pancreas occupies the shallow area, which indicates on the gut dorsal side the beginning of the intestine coiling. In addition, up to 25 lymphatic-like nodes accompany the inner border of the spiral valve. The mesenteric artery forms a long axis for the intestine. All the components of the gastrointestinal tract are attached to each other by connective sheaths, and are wrapped by connective tissue, and by the serosa externally. We believe that several previous observations have been misinterpreted and that the anatomy of the lungfish gut is more similar among all the three lungfish genera than previously thought. Curiously, the gross anatomical organization is not modified during aestivation. We hypothesize that the absence of function is accompanied by structural modifications of the epithelium, and are currently investigating this possibility

 Autoría: Icardo J., Wong W., Colvee E., Loong A., Ip Y.,

 Fuente: Anatomical Record, 2010, 293(7), 1146-1154

 Editorial: Wiley-Blackwell

 Año de publicación: 2010

 Nº de páginas: 9

 Tipo de publicación: Artículo de Revista

 DOI: 10.1002/ar.21154

 ISSN: 1932-8486,1932-8494

 Url de la publicación: https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.21154

Autoría

ELVIRA COLVEE BENLLOCH

LOONG, AI M.

IP, YUEN K.