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Dive into the research topics where James Cronshaw is active.

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Featured researches published by James Cronshaw.


Protoplasma | 1968

Fine structure of the aesthetasc hairs ofPagurus hirsutiusculus dana

Helen Ghiradella; James Cronshaw; James F. Case

SummaryThe thin-walled aesthetasc pegs on the antennules of a small hermit crab,Pagurus hirsutiusculus, were studied by light and electron microscopy. The lumen of each aesthetasc was found to be filled with the dendrites of 300–500 bipolar neurons whose cell bodies lie beneath the base of the aesthetasc. These dendrites are ciliary in nature, having well developed basal bodies and rootlets.Each basal body gives rise to a cilium which divides to form a cluster of slender branches, each of which contains a microtubule running lengthwise. These structures occupy most of the length of the hair.The cuticle of the aesthetasc wall is thin and tenuous. Except for the pore canals in the basal region, we have found no pores at either light or electron microscope level, but as the hair is extremely permeable, we conclude that the cuticle itself may permit the passage of solutions. This permeability of the cuticle and the large numbers of dendrites within support the hypothesis that the aesthetascs are chemoreceptors.


Protoplasma | 1968

Cell division in leaves ofNicotiana

James Cronshaw; Katherine Esau

SummaryYoung leaves ofNicotiana tabacum were fixed in glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde followed by osmium tetroxide. The fine structure of dividing cells was studied. Before prophase a band of microtubules was observed between the nucleus and the cell wall at a position judged as the future plane of division. The microtubules in the band are 4–6 units deep and relatively closely packed, giving sections of the band a characteristic appearance. Micro-tubules of the mitotic spindle, the phragmoplast, and the preprophase band are morphologically similar. Some of the microtubules of the mitotic spindle and the phragmoplast have an undulate appearance. It is suggested that the undulate microtubules may have been fixed at a time when microwaves were traveling along them. The cell plate is formed by a fusion of small smooth surfaced vesicles and small coated vesicles. Fusion of small vesicles results first in larger vesicles and then in a meshwork of new cell-wall material surrounded by new regions of plasma membrane. Most of the vesicles are derived from dictyosomes and may be produced before and during prophase as well as during later stages of division. The ER may also contribute some vesicles to the cell plate.


Environmental Research | 1979

Effects of mild cold stress on the survival of seawater-adapted Mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) maintained on food contaminated with petroleum

W.N. Holmes; J. Gorsline; James Cronshaw

Abstract (1) Seawater-adapted Mallard ducks maintained in the laboratory will freely consume food that has been contaminated with either any one of a variety of crude oils or a petroleum derivative such as No. 2 fuel oil. (2) During a 100-day experimental period total masses of petroleum equivalent to 50% of the mean body weight were consumed by some birds and many showed no apparent symptoms of distress. (3) The consumption of petroleum-contaminated food was frequently accompanied by a persistent hyperphagia but no clear patterns of change in body weight were associated with this condition. (4) Among those birds that survived the 100-day experimental period only small changes in mean body weight were observed between successive weighings and in most instances these represented less than 10% of the previously recorded weight. (5) In all groups, including those maintained on uncontaminated food, most of the mortality occurred following exposure to continuous mild cold stress. The total number of deaths in the groups given petroleum-contaminated food, however, was always higher than that among birds given uncontaminated food. (6) The spate of mortality that occurred in groups given petroleum-contaminated food usually occurred earlier, lasted longer, and involved more birds than it did among groups fed uncontaminated food. (7) The pattern of each episode of mortality was sometimes quantitatively related to the concentration of petroleum in the food and a striking range of relative toxicities were observed among the crude oils from different geographic regions. (8) Throughout the experiment, the mean body weight of the birds that died was always significantly less than that of the survivors in the same group; in all instances most of the loss in weight occurred during the 2 weeks preceding death. (9) Autopsy revealed that adrenal hypertrophy and lymphoepithelial involution were characteristic in all of the birds that died, suggesting that a high level of adrenocortical stimulation preceded death. Such high levels of adrenocortical stimulation, therefore, probably occurred sooner in birds consuming petroleum-contaminated food than in birds given uncontaminated food. (10) The consumption of petroleum-contaminated food seemed to constitute a nonspecific stressor and among birds already exposed to stresses, such as hyperosmotic drinking water (seawater) and persistent cold, the ingestion of petroleum seemed to render them more vulnerable to adrenocortical exhaustion, and death frequently ensued.


Planta | 1973

Adenosine triphosphatase in the phloem of Cucurbita.

Jamison Gilder; James Cronshaw

SummaryThe distribution of adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity in the phloem of petioles and minor veins of Cucurbita maxima has been studied using a lead phosphate precipitation procedure. ATPase activity was localized in sieve elements, companion cells and parenchyma cells. Activity was found at the cell surfaces, associated with the dispersed P-protein of mature sieve elements, in mitochondria, sieve-element reticulum, and at specific regions of the cell walls. It is suggested that the ATPase at the phloem cell surfaces may function in intercellular transport of assimilates or ions, and that the ATPase activity associated with the P-protein may function in the translocation process or in callose deposition.


Planta | 1978

Cytochemical localization of adenosine triphosphatase in the phloem of Pisum sativum and its relation to the function of transfer cells

Barbara J. Bentwood; James Cronshaw

The cytochemical localization of ATPase in differentiating and mature phloem cells of Pisum sativum L. has been studied using a lead precipitation technique. Phloem transfer cells at early stages of differentiation exhibit strong enzyme activity in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and some reaction product is deposited on the vacuolar and plasma membranes. As the phloem transfer cells mature and develop their characteristic wall structures, strong enzyme activity can be observed in association with the plasma membranes and nuclear envelopes. Mature phloem transfer cells with elaborate cell-wall ingrowths show ATPase activity evenly distributed on plasma-membrane surfaces. Differentiating sieve elements show little or no enzyme activity. When sieve elements are fully mature they have reaction product in the parietal and stacked cisternae of the ER. There is no ATPase activity associated with P-protein at any stage of sieve-element differentiation or with the sieve-element plasma membranes. It is suggested that the intensive ATPase activity on the plasma membranes of the transfer cells is evidence for a transport system involved in the active movement of photosynthetic products through these cells.


Planta | 1966

Tracheid differentiation in tobacco pith cultures

James Cronshaw

SummarySterile pith cultures of Nicotiana tabacum have been induced to form localized regions of differentiating tracheids. These localized regions have been examined by phase, fluorescence, and electron microscopy, and polarization optics. Fixation for electron microscopy was with glutaraldehyde-osmium. The differentiating tracheids develop characteristic thick cell walls which are eventually lignified. The lignifications appear to be uniform throughout the secondary wall and little or no lignin appears to be deposited in the primary walls or intercellular layer. At all stages of secondary wall deposition, the peripheral cytoplasm contains a system of microtubules which form a pattern similar to that of the developing thickenings. Within this system the microtubules are oriented, the direction of orientation mirroring that of the fibrils in the most recently deposited parts of the wall. The observations support the view that the microtubules are somehow involved in microfibril orientation. The microtubules appear to be attached to the plasma membrane which has a triple layered structure. The two electron dense layers of the plasma membrane have a particulate structure. In the differentiating tracheids at regions where secondary wall thickening has not yet been deposited numerous invaginations of the plasma membrane are observed which contain loosely organized fibrillar material. It is suggested that these are areas of localized activity of the plasma membrane and that the enzymes concerned with the final organization of the cellulose microfibrils are situated at the surface of the plasma membrane. Dictyosomes in the differentiation cells give rise to vesicles which contain fibrous material and the contents are incorporated into the cell wall. Numerous profiles characteristic of plasmodesmata are evident in sections of the secondary thickenings.


Journal of Ultrastructure Research | 1968

Endoplasmic reticulum in the sieve element of Cucurbita

Katherine Esau; James Cronshaw

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in immature sieve elements of Cucurbita maxima Duchesne resembles that of other types of nucleate cells in morphology and distribution. In mature sieve elements the ER assumes two forms. One of these is represented by a network closely applied to the plasma membrane lining the cell wall. The other consists of stacked membranes. The second form, which occurs next to the wall in various regions of the cell, is encountered only occasionally. The netted parietal ER is possibly continuous through the sieve-plate pores and may be associated with the plasmodesmata connecting the sieve element with the companion cells.


Journal of Ultrastructure Research | 1973

The distribution of adenosine triphosphatase activity in differentiating and mature phloem cells of Nicotiana tabacum and its relationship to phloem transport.

Jamison Gilder; James Cronshaw

A cytochemical study has been made of the distribution of ATPase activity during the differentiation of phloem cells in Nicotiana tabacum . At early stages of differentiation, P-protein bodies consisting of compact aggregates of P-protein tubules are formed in the sieve elements. Cells at this stage of development show ATPase activity at their surfaces, in mitochondria, and in dictysomes; however, there is no evidence of activity associated with the P-protein bodies. At intermediate stages of sieve element differentiation, when the P-protein tubules begin to disperse in the cell lumen, reaction product indicating ATPase activity is observed associated with the P-protein. Activity is also found during this stage at the cell surfaces, in the mitochondria, dictyosomes, and plasmodesmata. In mature sieve elements, ATPase activity is associated with the dispersed P-proteins, at the cell surfaces, sieve-element reticulum, and in mitochondria. ATPase activity is demonstrated in companion cells and parenchyma cells at all stages at the surfaces, and in mitochondria and plasmodesmata. The increase in ATPase activity in the lumen of sieve elements during and after dispersal of the P-protein is discussed in relation to the onset of translocation and to the simultaneous conformation change from tubules to striated fibrils which occurs in Nicotiana .


Environmental Research | 1978

Some effects of ingested petroleum on seawater-adapted ducks (Anas platyrhynchos).

W.N. Holmes; James Cronshaw; J. Gorsline

Male Pekin ducks adapted to seawater and maintained under sheltered conditions (27 degrees C) in the laboratory may consume considerable volumes of petroleum without showing overt symptoms of distress. Under these conditions, birds consuming petroleum-contaminated food have shown a persistent hyperphagia; this was most apparent among those given food contaminated with South Louisiana crude oil, least apparent among birds given No. 2 fuel oil, and intermediate among those that consumed food contaminated with Kuwait crude oil. When maintained at 27 degrees C, some mortality occurred among the birds given South Louisiana crude oil (22.2%) and No. 2 fuel oil (35.7%), whereas none of the freshwater- and seawater-maintained birds given uncontaminated food and none of the birds given Kuwait crude oil died during this period. Following their exposure to chronic mild cold stress (3 degrees C), mortality occurred in all groups of birds; the birds that had consumed petroleum-contaminated food tended to die earlier and in larger numbers than either the seawater- or freshwater-maintained control birds. These effects suggest that the mortality in all groups of birds was due primarily to the additive effects of a series of nonspecific stressors. Thus, at autopsy, birds that had succumbed to the effects of these stressors frequently showed adrenal hypertrophy and severe involution of the lymphoepithelial tissues. The consumption of petroleum-contaminated food seemed to constitute only one of a series of environmental stressors, and, among birds that were already exposed to stressors such as hypertonic drinking water and persistent cold, the ingestion of petroleum seemed to render them more vulnerable and death frequently ensued.


Planta | 1970

Sieve-plate pores in tobacco and bean.

Richard Anderson; James Cronshaw

SummaryTobacco and bean plants were wilted and then fixed as whole plants with formaldehyde-glutaraldehyde for electron microscopy. In some tobacco plants the sieve-plate pores were large, with little callose. Light slime plugs were present, but there was no compaction of P-protein in the pores. Some pores in wilted bean plants were also unplugged. In other plants of both tobacco and bean the sieve-plate pores were plugged. The pores in unwilted control plants of both tobacco and bean were invariably plugged. Tobacco plants were also cut into thin slices and then immediately fixed. In specimens prepared in this way there was little callose in the pores, and many of the pores were not plugged with P-protein. These observations provide additional evidence that sieve-plate pores may be unplugged in vivo.

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W. N. Holmes

University of California

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Katherine Esau

University of California

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J. Gorsline

University of California

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J. L. Redondo

University of California

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James F. Case

University of California

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Jamison Gilder

University of California

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