PMID: 1189903Jan 1, 1975Paper

The harp seal, Pagophilus groenlandicus (Erxleben, 1777). XVII. Structure and metabolic adaption of the caval sphincter muscle with some observations on the diaphragm.

Acta Anatomica
J C George, K Ronald

Abstract

Three types of fibre, dark (type 1), light (type 2) and intermediate, were distinguished in the caval sphincter muscle of the diaphragm in the harp seal (Pagophilus groenlandicus) using histochemical and electron-microscopic techniques. The dark fibre contained large peripheral aggregations of mitochondria, numerous lipid droplets and dense aggregates of glycogen granules. The same features were observed in the dark fibre of the diaphragm muscle too. In the light of the low oxidative enzyme activity and high lipase activity observed in the diaphragm and other skeletal muscles of the harp seal in previous studies, it is postulated that these mitochondrial aggregations and lipid droplets represent an adaptation for the generation of heat through non-shivering thermogenesis comparable to that in the brown adipose tissue. Such ability to generate and maintain heat by uncoupling the oxidative phosphorylation process should enable the caval sphincter muscle to function efficiently in regulating the cardiac return of blood from the inferior vena cava during a dive when the body temperature as a whole drops. The lack of the regional differences in the fibre composition of the harp seal diaphragm, as were reported in the rat diaphragm, ...Continue Reading

Citations

Dec 15, 1975·Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. B, Comparative Biochemistry·F R EngelhardtB L Walker

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