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122


UNPHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITIONS FAVORING AGGREGATION OF SMOOTH-MUSCLE MYOSIN IN-SITU [Meeting Abstract]

ROSENBLU.J
ISI:A1972N854000439
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 46843

Myosin-like tactoids in trypsin-treated blood platelets

Rosenbluth, J
PMCID:2108298
PMID: 4329160
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8703

Characterization of an unusual catecholamine-containing cell type in the toad hypothalamus. A correlated ultrastructural and fluorescence histochemical study

McKenna, O C; Rosenbluth, J
PMCID:2108118
PMID: 4100487
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8704

Myosin-like aggregates in trypsin-treated smooth muscle cells

Rosenbluth, J
PMCID:2108229
PMID: 5545103
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8705

Stress relaxation in Ascaris obliquely striated muscle

Rosenbluth J; Eberstein A; Friedman J
PMID: 4244648
ISSN: 0010-406x
CID: 8706

Ultrastructure of dyads in muscle fibers of Ascaris lumbricoides

Rosenbluth J
PMCID:2107699
PMID: 5801429
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8707

Sarcoplasmic reticulum of an unusually fast-acting crustacean muscle

Rosenbluth J
PMCID:2107662
PMID: 5792338
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8708

OBLIQUELY STRIATED MUSCLE : IV. Sarcoplasmic Reticulum, Contractile Apparatus, and Endomysium of the Body Muscle of a Polychaete, Glycera, in Relation to Its Speed

Rosenbluth, J
Body muscle cells of the bloodworm Glycera, a polychaete annelid, were studied by electron microscopy and compared with muscle cells of the more slowly acting nematode Ascaris, which have been described previously. Both muscles are obliquely striated. The predominant type of bloodworm fiber is characterized by a prominent transversely oriented sarcoplasmic reticulum with numerous dyads at the surface of each cell. Thick myofilaments are approximately 3 micro long and overlap along approximately 60% of their length in extended fibers and approximately 80% in shortened fibers. There is virtually no endomysium and very little intracellular skeleton, and the cells are attached by desmosomes to one another rather than to connective tissue. Dense bodies are absent from the fibers and in their place are Z lines, which are truly linear rather than planar. Scattered among the predominant fibers are others, less orderly in arrangement, in which the SR is much less prominent and in which the thick filaments are thicker and longer and overlap to an even smaller degree. It is suggested that physiological differences between bloodworm and Ascaris muscles derive from differences in the proportion of series to parallel linkages between the contractile elements, differences in the amount and disposition of the SR, and differences in the impedance to shear within the myofibrils
PMID: 19866720
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 110654

Obliquely striated muscle. 3. Contraction mechanism of Ascaris body muscle

Rosenbluth J
PMCID:2107232
PMID: 6040534
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8709

Redundant myelin sheaths and other ultrastructural features of the toad cerebellum

Rosenbluth J
PMCID:2106890
PMID: 5901501
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 8710