The natural variability in cell proliferation
activity in the epithelium of the digestive gland and
stomach was investigated in mussels, Mytilus
galloprovincialis (Lmk), of different age and tidal level
at different seasons. After treating mussels with the
thymidine analogue bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) for 6
hours, BrdU immunohistochemistry was performed
every 2 hours for the next 36. The relative proportion of
BrdU positive cells was quantified as BrdU labelling
(‰). Marked seasonal differences were recorded in
BrdU labelling, with much higher proliferating activity
in summer than in autumn and winter. Cell proliferation
seemed not to be significantly dissimilar between
mussels of different age (size). In contrast, the digestive
gland epithelium of mussels from intertidal and subtidal
populations differed not only in the levels but also in the
pattern of variation of BrdU labelling, which in intertidal
mussels appeared to be modulated by photoperiod and
tide, unlike in subtidal mussels, in which variations
followed a circatidal pattern