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      The apical sensory organ of a gastropod veliger is a receptor for settlement cues.

      1 , ,
      The Biological bulletin
      JSTOR

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          Abstract

          On the basis of anatomy and larval behavior, the apical sensory organ (ASO) of gastropod veliger larvae has been implicated as the site of perception of cues for settlement and metamorphosis. Until now, there have been no experimental data to support this hypothesis. In this study, cells in the ASO of veliger larvae of the tropical nudibranch Phestilla sibogae were stained with the styryl vital dye DASPEI and then irradiated with a narrow excitatory light beam on a fluorescence microscope. When its ASO cells were bleached by irradiation for 20 min or longer, an otherwise healthy larva was no longer able to respond to the usual metamorphic cue, a soluble metabolite from a coral prey of the adult nudibranch. The irradiated cells absorbed the dye acridine orange, suggesting that they were dying. When larvae not stained with DASPEI were similarly irradiated, or when stained larvae were irradiated with the light beam focused on other parts of the body, there was no loss of ability to metamorphose. Together these data provide strong support for the hypothesis. Potassium and cesium ions, known to induce metamorphosis in larvae of many marine-invertebrate phyla, continue to induce metamorphosis in larvae that have lost the ability to respond to the coral inducer due to staining and irradiation. These results demonstrate that (1) the ASO-ablated larvae have not lost the ability to metamorphose and (2) the ions do not act only on the metamorphic-signal receptor cells, but at other sites downstream in the metamorphic signal transduction pathway.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Biol Bull
          The Biological bulletin
          JSTOR
          0006-3185
          0006-3185
          Feb 2000
          : 198
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Kewalo Marine Laboratory, University of Hawaii, Honolulu 96813, USA. hadfield@hawaii.edu
          Article
          10.2307/1542804
          10707814
          ab1a2735-af82-4f87-a59d-242ed00ddfbd
          History

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