Hyperplastic growth of mucous cells in the mantle of the mussel Modiolus kurilensis from a heavily polluted area of Amursky Bay, Sea of Japan

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Abstract

The histology of an external mantle growth in 1 of 500 Modiolus kurilensis from a heavily polluted area of Amursky Bay, Sea of Japan, was described. The growth consisted of subepithelial basophilic mucous cells containing glucosaminoglycans, eosinophilic large-granular cells with proteins and neutral polysaccharides, and mixed (acid + neutral mucopolysaccharides) cell types. Some subepithelial eosinophilic and basophilic gland cells were dividing and seemed to be the source of tumor growth. The mitotic index of growth cells reached 0.5% on some growth sections; however, many mitoses were pycnotic. The emergence of the tumor on the mussel mantle is probably related to a compensatory or regenerative hyperplasia of subepithelial mucous cells.

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Usheva, L. N., & Odintsova, N. A. (1998). Hyperplastic growth of mucous cells in the mantle of the mussel Modiolus kurilensis from a heavily polluted area of Amursky Bay, Sea of Japan. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 33(3), 235–238. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao033235

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