The innervation pattern of crustacean skeletal muscle |
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Authors: | Prof. Dr. Ernst Florey Mary Anne Cahill |
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Affiliation: | (1) Fakultät für Biologie, Universität Konstanz, Konstanz, Bundesrepublik Deutschland;(2) Universität Konstanz, Postfach 5560, D-7750 Konstanz, Germany |
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Abstract: | Summary The innervation pattern of distal muscle fibers of the opener muscle of walking legs of crayfish (Astacus leptodactylus) was investigated using methylene-blue staining, cobalt infiltration, and electron microscopy. A quantitative analysis of the entire innervation of single muscle fibers was attempted.It was found that instead of the generally assumed parallel array of numerous excitatory and inhibitory terminals, innervation consists of only a few branched terminals. The branches of excitatory and inhibitory terminals lie side-by-side. Both types are characterized by numerous varicosities (see Fig. 9B). The aggregate length of excitatory as well as inhibitory terminals on one muscle fiber is, on the average, about 1,500 m with a total of 152 varicosities spaced about 10 m apart. The average diameter of the varicosities is 4.26 m, that of the connecting thin segments about 0.5 m. Total terminal surface of motor or inhibitory terminals amounts to about 10,000 m2 per muscle fiber. There are approximately 2,000 motor synapses on each muscle fiber, but their average total area is only about 6% of the terminal membrane area, or 0.06% of the (idealized) muscle fiber surface.There are conspicuous differences in the postsynaptic specializations associated with excitatory and inhibitory terminals; these are described in detail.The results are discussed in a functional context and with regard to design and results of electrophysiological experiments.Supported by Sonderforschungsbereich 138 of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft |
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Keywords: | Crustacean muscle Nerve terminals Synapses |
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