Morphological and histological description of the midgut caeca in true crabs (Malacostraca: Decapoda: Brachyura): origin, development and potential role
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Castejón, Diego; Rotllant, Guiomar; Alba Tercedor, Francisco Javier; Ribes, Enric; Durfort, Mercè; Guerao, GuillermoEditorial
SpringerLink
Materia
Larvae Anterior midgut caeca Posterior midgut caecum Macroapocrine secretion
Fecha
2022-02-04Referencia bibliográfica
Castejón, D. et. al. BMC Zool 7, 9 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s40850-022-00108-x]
Patrocinador
INIA Project (grant number RTA2011–00004–00-00) funded by Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness); FPI-INIA fellowship (INIA Project RTA2011–00004–00-00) funded by Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness)Resumen
Background: The decapods are a major group of crustaceans that includes shrimps, prawns, crayfishes, lobsters, and
crabs. Several studies focused on the study of the digestive system of the decapods, constituted by the oesophagus,
stomach, midgut tract, midgut gland, and hindgut. Nevertheless, in the midgut tract there are associated a set of
organs called “midgut caeca”, which are among the most controversial and less studied digestive organs of this group.
This work used the common spider crab Maja brachydactyla Balss, 1922 as a model to resolve the origin, development,
and potential role of the midgut caeca. Such organs were studied in the larvae (zoea I, zoea II, megalopa), first
juveniles, and adult phases, being employed traditional and modern techniques: dissection, micro-computed tomography
(Micro-CT), and light and electron microscopical analyses (TEM and SEM).
Results: The common spider crab has a pair of anterior midgut caeca and a single posterior caecum that originate
from the endoderm germ layer: they develop from the midgut tract, and their epithelium is composed by secretory
cells while lacking a cuticle lining. The midgut caeca are small buds in the newly hatched larvae, enlarge linearly during
the larval development, and then continue growing until became elongated and coiled blind-tubules in adults.
The adult midgut caeca are internally folded to increase their inner surface. The electron microscopy observations
showed that the midgut caeca are highly active organs with important macroapocrine and microapocrine secretory
activity. Our results suggest that the role of the caeca might be related to the digestive enzyme secretion. The secretory
activity should increase as the animal grows in size.
Conclusion: The present study resolves the embryonic origin of the midgut caeca (endoderm derived organs),
development (general lengthening starting from small buds), and role (active secretory organs). The secretory activity
of the midgut caeca should be incorporated in the current models of the digestive physiology in different decapod
taxa.