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Fig. 1. Pharyngeal anatomy and pharyngeal pumping. (A) The pharynx is a tubular
muscle divided into three regions: the corpus, connected to the mouth at the
anterior end, the isthmus, and the terminal bulb, connected to the intestine
at the posterior end. The corpus is further subdivided into a cylindrical or
tapered anterior section, the procorpus (proCo), and a posterior bulb, the
metacorpus (metaCo). (B) Simplified schematic cross-section through the
pharynx. The lumen is shown almost closed, and is approximately to scale. The
hatching in the muscle cells shows the orientation of their acto-myosin
filaments. When they contract the muscle cells become thinner in the radial
dimension and longer circumferentially, pulling the lumen open. Three
intermediate filament-containing marginal cells anchor the apices of the
lumen. (C) Pharyngeal pumping is a contraction-relaxation cycle involving the
corpus, anterior half of the isthmus and terminal bulb. The cycle begins with
the near-simultaneous contraction of these muscles. Contraction of the
radially oriented muscles of the corpus and anterior isthmus opens the lumen.
Because the posterior isthmus remains closed during this time, the lumen is
filled by liquid sucked in through the mouth, carrying with it suspended food
particles. Contraction of the terminal bulb rotates the plates of the grinder,
breaking bacteria in the terminal bulb and passing the debris back to the
intestine. After contraction there is a near-simultaneous relaxation,
returning the grinder to its resting position and closing the lumen of the
corpus and anterior isthmus. Liquid is expelled from the corpus and anterior
isthmus, but food particles are trapped and transported posteriorly. A second
motion of the pharyngeal muscles, posterior isthmus peristalsis (not shown
here) carries food from the anterior isthmus back to the terminal bulb.
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