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Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, Vol s3-105, 301-310, Copyright © 1964 by Company of Biologists
1 Gatty Marine Laboratory and Department of Natural History, the University, St. Andrews, Fife
The elongated cells which bear the continually active giant cilia of the combs contain numerous large mitochondria, up to 8 µ by 6 µ in size, which are filled with irregular tubular cristae. The ciliated cells are up to 100 µ long, but only 10 µ wide, and from their centrally situated nucleus can be traced a succession of stages, tentatively interpreted as the formation, growth, erosion, and final dissolution of mitochondria. Small ones occur near the nucleus in the region of the nuclear membrane, which may there be irregular, puffy, and electron dense. Some small mitochondria are surrounded by amorphous material which stains heavily with lead; others lie against the nuclear membrane, as if in intimate relation with it. Cristae of mitochondria which are interpreted as juvenile are filled with an amorphous material; some of the cristae open to the outside of the mitochondrion. Towards the ciliated end of the cells the appearance of the mitochondria suggests that they are breaking down; this is the region where food particles are eroded and where the cilia consume energy. Here the mitochondria are shrunken and around them are numerous vesicles; their cristae are fewer and they open into the cytoplasm. Similar vesicles, which are apparently of mitochondrial origin, are extruded between the cilia from the cells. The proposed cycle of generation and disintegration of mitochondria, based upon morphology, is so far an unproved hypothesis.