What's the difference between echinoderm and pluteus?

Echinoderm


Definition:

  • (n.) One of the Echinodermata.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The fertilization reaction of echinoderm eggs (Lytechinus pictus, a sea urchin, and Dendraster excentricus, a sand dollar) was followed with intracellular electrodes.
  • (2) I describe the anatomy and fine structure of the echinoderm ovary, with emphasis on both the cellular relationships of the germ line cells to the somatic cells of the inner epithelium, and on the neuromuscular systems.
  • (3) In echinoderms, which stop at interphase, no such a factor has so far been found.
  • (4) In frogs and mammals, the oocytes are arrested at the second metaphase of meiosis whereas in echinoderms they are blocked later, at the pronucleus stage.
  • (5) An examination of Antp class homeo box genes in deuterostomes indicates that a chromosomal duplication has taken place in the evolutionary line leading to the vertebrates after the divergence of the echinoderms.
  • (6) Next, we present some features of the described processes for sugar and amino acid transport in the tubular portion of gastrointestinal tracts of three major invertebrate groups: echinoderms, molluscs, and arthropods.
  • (7) The emonctory structures, functions and stereotype and their component parts are studied in protists, spongia, coelenterata and coelomata: lower worms, annelids, their hyponeurian descendents (arthropods, molluses) and epineurian descedents echinoderms and protochordates (Stomochordata, Tunicata, Cephalochordata).
  • (8) The transition from the single creatine kinase locus, characteristic of certain echinoderms, to the two creatine kinase loci which are orthologous to those present in all vertebrates, occurred early in the chordate line.
  • (9) These features are characteristic of sea urchin (Echinoderm) spines which are composed of ornately formed calcite crystals covered by an epithelium.
  • (10) The echinoderms Asterias rubens and Solaster papposus (Class Asteroidea) metabolize injected [4(-14)C]cholest-5-en-3beta-ol to produce labelled 5alpha-cholestan-3beta-ol and 5alpha-cholest-7-en-3beta-ol.
  • (11) Echinoderm oocyte maturation is reviewed and a description of the ultrastructural, biochemical and molecular biological changes thought to occur during this process is presented.
  • (12) Another round of gene duplication, involving Wnt-3, -5, -7, and -10, occurred after the echinoderm lineage arose, on the ancestral lineage of jawed vertebrates.
  • (13) Changes in the distribution and organizational state of actin in the cortex of echinoderm eggs are believed to be important events following fertilization.
  • (14) Small numbers are present in algae, ferns, conifers, sponges, echinoderms, other marine animals, and arthropods.
  • (15) However, recent work which used colchicine to block microtubule assembly in the eggs of two other echinoderms, S. purpuratus and D. excentricus, has raised serious questions about the generality of this role for spindle microtubules.
  • (16) It would seem that these epitope regions have been strongly conserved since the epitope region is also present in the phosphoprotein of echinoderm teeth.
  • (17) Both species differences and species similarities in the agglutination were found in spermatozoa of the echinoderm, the sea urchin and the starfish.
  • (18) Furthermore, during meiotic maturation in these echinoderm and amphibian oocytes, this is followed by activation of many of the same protein-serine (threonine) kinases that are stimulated when quiescent mammalian somatic cells are prompted with mitogens to traverse from G0 to G1 phase.
  • (19) One of these fragments contains the active site and is identical at all sequenced residues with the corresponding region from the echinoderm sperm flagellar creatine kinase, and is 96% homologous with both chicken and rat B creatine kinase subunits.
  • (20) A significant feature of the early development of fertilized echinoderm and amphibian eggs and germinating seed embryos is the utilization of genetic information that has been previously transcribed during oogenesis and seed ripening.

Pluteus


Definition:

  • (n.) The free-swimming larva of sea urchins and ophiurans, having several long stiff processes inclosing calcareous rods.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) During subsequent development to the pluteus larva stage this network increases in overall morphological complexity and becomes regionally distinct.
  • (2) A fluoresceinated lineage tracer was injected into individual blastomeres of eight-cell sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) embryos, and the location of the progeny of each blastomere was determined in the fully developed pluteus.
  • (3) When sea urchin eggs were fertilized with 125IFC-labeled sperm, the radioactivity from the sperm was quantitatively transferred to the egg (at a ratio of one sperm equivalent per egg) and persisted in the embryo as it developed to the pluteus larval state (5 days at 12 degrees C).
  • (4) The association of these genes with ectoderm is based on their being specifically expressed, albeit at low levels, in the pluteus ectoderm, and their being suppressed when presumptive ectoderm is made to differentiate as endoderm in the case of the embryo treated with lithium.
  • (5) The sea urchin Heliocidaris tuberculata undergoes typical development, forming an echinoid pluteus larva, whereas H. erythrogramma undergoes direct development via a highly modified, nonfeeding larva.
  • (6) The lipid content of the organic fraction of the mineralized matrix recalls the spicules of Pluteus larva reported in an earlier study.
  • (7) Because the sea urchin embryo develops from an egg to a pluteus larva in the absence of growth, this stockpiling of SpS24 mRNA anticipates rather than accompanies the onset of growth, which does not begin until after feeding.
  • (8) Single strand tracer excess titrations of alpha- and beta-tubulin mRNA and RNA gel blot hybridizations indicate that tubulin mRNA remains at a constant 1.3 X 10(5) transcripts per embryo during cleavage stages, increases during ciliogenesis shortly before hatching (12 hr PF), declines until midgastrula (30-35 hr PF), and then gradually increases 3-fold to about 6 X 10(5) per pluteus larva (72 hr PF).
  • (9) Tissues that have the ultrastructural characteristics of nervous tissues are associated with ciliary and muscular elements of the pluteus larva of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus.
  • (10) Sizing on 1.5% agarose gel indicated that the length of the palindromic sequences at the early blastula stage was predominantly about 200 b. p., and at the pluteus stage 240 b. p. Sensitivity of the palindromic sequences to S1 nuclease digestion at the blastula and gastrula stages was different.
  • (11) However, when aphidicolin is added after the vegetal plate has thickened, development continues normally through pluteus formation, even though DNA synthesis is inhibited by greater than or equal to 90% and cell division has ceased.
  • (12) Paracentrotus lividus embryos were continuously labeled with P32 from hatching blastula to pluteus.
  • (13) The LvN 1.2-kb mRNA was first detectable by Northern blots at the mesenchyme blastula stage just prior to gastrulation and then accumulated approximately 15-fold from gastrulation to the pluteus stage.
  • (14) A few days before metamorphosis, the hyaline layer lining the vestibular invagination of the competent pluteus larva is replaced by a three-layered cuticle resembling that of the adult sea urchin.
  • (15) Using indirect immunofluorescence, we have localized a molecule which shares antigenic determinants with mammalian insulin in the unfertilized egg as well as in the gut of pluteus larva sea urchins.
  • (16) Taking advantage of the superior resolution of cellular CAT expression patterns using the antibody visualization method, we found for the first time that, in addition to the expression in aboral ectoderm, some cells in the ciliated band of the pluteus express CyIIIa .
  • (17) The message is first detectable by RNase protection assays around hatching blastula stage and accumulates through pluteus larva stage.
  • (18) CAT mRNA was detected by in situ hybridization in serial sections of pluteus stage embryos derived from the injected eggs.
  • (19) Fractionation of pluteus stage embryos demonstrates that the protein is localized primarily with cells that form the syncytium of primary mesenchyme that elaborates the larval endoskeleton; furthermore, immunofluorescence localizes the epitope to the periphery of the endoskeleton in situ.
  • (20) Chromatin fractions differing in their transcriptional activity were isolated by selective micrococcal nuclease digestion of nuclei from sea urchin embryos (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) at the gastrula and pluteus stage.

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