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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 1185

J.B. Tucker; Microtubule-arms and propulsion of food particles inside a large feeding organelle in the ciliate Phascolodon vorticella. J.Cell Sci. 10:883-903, 1972

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Attention is drawn to the apparently invariable presence of rows of arm-bearing microtubules lining the sucking mouthparts of ciliates. Their arrangement inside the cytopharyngeal basket of Phascolodon in described and compared with that in the tentacles of suctorians and the sucking tubes and baskets of other ciliates. It is suggested that arms are involved in the propulsion of materials alongside microtubules when these ciliates ingest food. Mechanisms by which arms may accomplish this are outlined. The different functions of links and other intertubular materials in the several microtubular basket components of Phascolodon are considered. The form and arrangement of microfilaments and pointed, sharp-edged structures around the mouth are also described. The possibility that the pointed structures are used for biting is discussed.