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Studies on pigment-activating substances in animals I. The separation by paper electrophoresis of chromactivating substances in arthropods

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

Francis G. W. Knowles
Affiliation:
Marlborough College, Wiltshire
David B. Carlisle
Affiliation:
The Plymouth Laboratory
Marie Dupont-Raabe
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Zoologie de la Sorbonne, Paris

Extract

It has been established that many substances can bring about a change in position of pigments in crustacean chromatophores (Florey, 1951). The extracts of certain animal tissues (pituitary, crustacean sinus-gland and post-commissure organs, insect brain and corpora cardiaca) are especially active (Brown, 1940; Knowles, 1953; Dupont-Raabe, 1952; Thomsen, 1943); there is evidence that these tissues intervene in the normal colour change of the animals which possess them and that their products may properly be considered as hormones. On the other hand, many species which do not themselves possess chromatophores (oligochaetes, molluscs, and many insects) have nevertheless been shown to contain substances in their tissues which will, after injection into crustaceans, initiate pigment movements (Scharrer, 1954). It has not yet been ascertained whether these pigment-activating substances chemically resemble normal colour-change hormones or whether the pigment movements they produce are pharmacodynamic effects irrelevant in the study of colour physiology.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1955

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