The epithelia of the main organs likely to be involved in contaminant uptake, viz. mantle and gill were studied in the Asiatic
clam Corbicula fluminea as a base for future ecotoxicological studies. On its margin, the mantle epithelium displays three folds
separated by two grooves. The outer epithelium made of cubic cells, and the periostracal groove are involved in the formation is
composed of the shell, secreting crystals and the periostracal lamella respectively. In the median area, the inner epithelium is
composed of three cell types: ordinary epithelial cells, ciliated cells and mucocytes. The gill epithelium displays two structurally
and functionally different areas: a respiratory area in the interlamellar chamber and, on the opposite side, a ciliated epithelium.
The respiratory epithelium is composed of thin pavement epithelial cells. The ciliated epithelium is made of different cell types:
lateral ciliated epithelial cells, secretory cells, latero-frontal ciliated cells and ciliated frontal cells. The role of the secretory cells
is particularly discussed in relation to their structural similarity with lower vertebrate chloride cells (ionocytes) involved in iono- and
osmoregulation processes.