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1.
Serial and interval EM series were used to examine the dorsal nerve tracts in the anterior nerve cord of a 12.5 day larva of Branchiostoma floridae. Fibres within the tracts derive from peripheral sensory cells and a class of intramedullary sensory neurones known as dorsal (Retzius) bipolar cells. Both form repeated synapses of similar type, apparently with the same targets. The synapses occur at points where, at intervals, the tracts expand to form large synaptic zones. The target dendrites, which form complex tangles, belong chiefly to dorsal translumenal cells, a class of neurone distinguished by their apical processes. The latter range from short extensions of the cell apex that contact the opposite side of the cord via junctions, but go no further, to elongate processes with slender branches that project to the contralateral dorsal tract. The morphology indicates that translumenal cells play the same role in amphioxus as internuncial neurones in vertebrate spinal cord. Their axons can be ipsilateral or contralateral; some synapse with motoneurones directly while others innervate other interneurones, including other translumenal cells. From the circuitry, the cells appear to be chiefly involved in integrating sensory input from peripheral mechanoreceptors. This could include acting as a filter that amplifies some input patterns over others, or that normalizes input, so that CNS circuits are not overloaded as new sensory cells differentiate during development. The functional importance of the translumenal system to the organism is reflected in a massive increase in size and cell numbers during the larval phase. The anterior, brain-like integrative centres of the cerebral vesicle, in contrast, are initially small and change very little.  相似文献   

2.
Chloromethyl (CM) DiI was applied to the exterior of living embryos, larvae, and metamorphic juveniles of amphioxus. This fluorescent dye is taken up preferentially (but not highly selectively) by epidermal receptors and often stains sensory axons to their full extent. Type I primary receptors in the epidermis first become morphologically detectable along the rostrocaudal axis of the 2.5 day larva when their epidermal perikarya extend unbranched axons to the nerve cord. These axons run posteriorly or anteriorly within the nerve cord, depending on whether their perikarya are located, respectively, rostral or caudal to the most posterior pharyngeal slit. In later larvae, axons of type I receptors are organized into a dorsal and a subdorsal sensory tract on either side of the nerve cord. In the epidermis of metamorphic juveniles, CM-DiI also stains type II receptors (which are axonless, secondary receptors) and ventral pit cells (which may not be receptors). It is probable, but not yet conclusively demonstrated, that peripheral neurites from Retzius bipolar cells (primary intramedullary sensory neurones) synapse with type II secondary epidermal receptors or ramify freely among the other epidermal cells. The discussion considers homologies among epidermal sensory receptors in chordates.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Each second brain nerve consists of only one single fibre terminating at two different types of touch receptors in the oral region. The two nerves are the dendrites of two perikarya in the forebrain and are the master neurons for ciliary reversal in the stigmata, which is a two-neuron reflex. By axoaxonal synapses they control one motor neuron in the midbrain, i.e. the command neuron for ciliary reversal in both rings. This cell sends one axon branch in each third nerve to the cilia cells. In the left nerve this fibre is closely associated with a coarsely granulated accessory fibre, which apparently regulates the ciliary beat. The third nerves also contain one fibre each from another motor neuron in the hindbrain. These fibres make synaptic contacts at some specialized epidermal cells in the lateral trunk behind the ciliary rings. A few previously unknown nerves in the dorsal forebrain innervate epidermal cells. It is likely that the complicated epidermal motor innervation regulates the secretory activity of the oikoplasts or of the epidermal cells in constructing a new house, including the necessary complicated filters and food trapping mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Serial transmission electron microscopy and 3D reconstruction were used to document cell morphology and position of the motoneurones innervating somites 1 and 2 of a 12.5-day amphioxus larva, of Branchiostoma floridae , and also those innervating the dorsal compartment of somites 3 through 6 of an 8-day larva. Motoneurones supplying the ventral and dorsal compartments can be distinguished from one another on a number of morphological criteria. The ventral compartment motoneurones are neither symmetrical nor particularly ordered in arrangement. Their cilia are short and point forward or obliquely across the central canal; their axons run along the basal lamina adjacent to processes from muscle fibres, with which they make extended linear series of synapses containing 45–60 nm synaptic vesicles. The dorsal compartment motoneurones are paired and tend to be positioned at or near the junctions between somites. Their cilia are longer and project caudally; their axons are large, filled with mitochondria and 30–45 nm synaptic vesicles, and make synapses only at specific, segmentally repeated sites.
  An unusual feature of both cell types is that synaptic input occurs all along the axon, either by direct axo-axonal synapses or via slender dendritic processes. This allows for redundancy and multiple inputs, and is possible only because amphioxus somatic motor axons lie entirely within the nerve cord, which is itself an unusual feature among chordates. The possible significance of dual somatic innervation is discussed in relation to the dual innervation of the head in vertebrates, which has separate sets of somatic and visceral/branchiomotor nerves.  相似文献   

5.
The use of immunofluorescence with affinity-purified antibodies enabled cytological localization of nerve growth factor-like material in the rat. Immunoreactivity was observed along various nerve tracts of the foetal rat brain and spinal cord at day 15 of gestation. Longitudinal pathways in ventral and dorsal spinal cord, ventral lower brain stem, posterior commissure, retroflex fascicle and in the olfactory bulb were all positive. A weaker and more widely spread immunostaining was visible in many areas in the central nervous system. Cranial nerves were strongly immunoreactive. Neuronal perikarya in the retina and the olfactory mucosa as well as filae olfactoriae and the olfactory nerve all the way to the olfactory bulb were also positive. In sensory ganglia and peripheral nerves most immunoreactivity was confined to supporting tissues, probably including Schwann cells. In irides, the pattern of immunoreactivity was similar to that of the sensory and autonomic innervation. More intensively fluorescent material was found in regrowing nerve fibres in iris transplants. Our histochemical results suggest that nerve growth factor and/or a related protein is present in large amounts along nerve pathways in supportive tissues of the peripheral nervous system as well as in the central nervous system during early development.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Retrograde cobalt labeling was performed by incubating the rootlets of cranial nerves IX, X and XI, or the central stumps of the same nerves, in a cobaltic lysine complex solution, and the distribution of efferent neurons sending their axons into these nerves was investigated in serial sections of the medulla and the cervical spinal cord in young rats. The following neuron groups were identified. The inferior salivatory nucleus lies in the dorsal part of the tegmentum at the rostral part of facial nucleus. It consists of a group of medium-sized and a group of small neurons. Their axons make a hair-pin loop at the midline and join the glossopharyngeal nerve. The dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus situates in the dorsomedial part of the tegmentum. Its rostral tip coincides with the first appearance of sensory fibres of the glossopharyngeal nerve, the caudal end extends into the pyramidal decussation. The constituting cells have globular or fusiform perikarya and they are the smallest known efferent neurons. The ambiguous nucleus is in the ventrolateral part of the tegmentum. The rostral tip lies dorsal to the facial nucleus, and the caudal tip extends to the level of the pyramidal decussation. The rostral one third of the ambiguous nucleus is composed of tightly-packed medium sized neurons, while larger neurons are arranged more diffusely in the caudal two thirds. The long dendrites are predominantly oriented in the dorsoventral direction. The dorsally-oriented axons take a ventral bend anywhere between the ambiguous nucleus and dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. The motoneurons of the accessorius nerve are arranged in a medial, a lateral and a weak ventral cell column. The medial column begins at the caudal aspect of the pyramidal decussation and terminates in C2 spinal cord segment. The lateral and ventral columns begin in C2 segment and extend into C6 segment. The neurons have large polygonal perikarya and characteristic cross-shaped dendritic arborizations. The axons follow a dorsally-arched pathway between the ventral and dorsal horns. The accessorius motoneurons have no positional relation to any of the vagal efferent neurons. It is concluded that the topography and neuronal morphology of accessorius motoneurons do not warrant the designation of a bulbar accessorius nucleus and a bulbar accessorius nerve.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunocytochemistry was utilized to quantify dopaminergic synapses in the inner plexiform layer of the retina of Bufo marinus. Since dopaminergic cells have bistratified dendritic arborisation in the inner plexiform layer, attention was given to the segregation of synapses between the scleral and the vitreal sublaminae. Light-microscopically, a more elaborate dendritic branching was observed in the scleral than in the vitreal sublamina. In contrast, about 55% of synapses occurred in the vitreal one fifth of the inner plexiform layer, 30% in the scleral fifth, and 15% in the intermediate laminae. Input sources and output targets showed only minor quantitative differences between sublaminae 1 and 5. TH-immunoreactive processes were found in presynaptic (62.8%) and postsynaptic (37.2%) positions. Synapses to the stained dendrites derived from bipolar (40.4%) and amacrine (59.6%) cells, whereas outputs from the TH-positive processes were directed to amacrine cells (56.8%) and to small and medium-sized dendrites (35.4%); at least some of these can be considered as ganglion cell dendrites. TH-positive profiles neither formed synapses with each other nor were presynaptic to bipolar cell terminals. Junctional appositions of the immunoreactive profiles were occasionally seen on non-stained amacrine and ganglion cell dendrites in the scleral sublamina of the inner plexiform layer and on optic axons in the optic fibre layer. Although dopaminergic cells are mainly involved in amacrine-amacrine interactions, inputs from bipolar terminals and outputs to ganglion cell dendrites were also substantial, suggestive of a role also in vertical information processing.  相似文献   

9.
Summary An antiserum against glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) of the rat brain was used to locate GAD activity in sections of the nervous system of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana. The sixth abdominal ganglion was chosen because electrophysiological evidence suggests the presence of GABAergic inhibitory synapses in the cereal-giant interneuron system. Groups of somata and numerous fibres and tracts were positively labelled by the GAD antiserum. A posterior group of labelled somata could be identified close to the entry of the cereal nerves. A line of somata clusters lay along a ventro-lateral furrow. Another discrete row of GAD-like cells was located dorso-laterally. Some small cells among the dorsal unpaired neurons were labelled. A small central group appeared under these cells. An abundance of GAD-like processes and transversal tracts were found within the neuropile. The different systems of GABAergic inhibitors in the ganglion are discussed; in particular we show that the fibres of cereal nerve X are not labelled. This demonstrates that the latter act on the giant fibres via interneurons. We suggest that the group that sends axons into the overlapping region between the cereal nerve and the giant fibre could be the inhibitory interneurons involved in this system.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The ultrastructure of synapses between the cord giant fibres (lateral and medial) and the motor giant fibres in crayfish, Astacus pallipes, third abdominal ganglia have been examined. These electrotonic synapses are asymmetrical, they have synaptic vesicles only in the presynaptic fibre, and they have synaptic cleft widths normally of about 100 Å but narrowed to about 50 Å in restricted areas. Localized increases in density of the synaptic cleft and adjacent membranes also occur within a synapse, and synaptic vesicles are most tightly grouped at the membrane in such areas. Tight or gap junctions with 30 Å or narrower widths have not been found, but the junctions probably function in a similar way to gap junctions.Three small nerves are closely associated with the synapses between the giant fibres. One of these small nerves has round synaptic vesicles and is thought to be excitatory on morphological grounds; one has flattened vesicles and is thought to be inhibitory; and one is postsynaptic to the lateral giant and the two small presynaptic nerves. It is proposed that these small nerves modulate activity in the much larger giant fibre synapse.  相似文献   

11.
Lateral cortex is the most laterally placed of the four cortical areas in snakes. Earlier studies suggest that it is composed of several subdivisions but provide no information on their organization. This paper first investigates the structure of lateral cortex in boa constrictors (Constrictor constrictor), garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis), and banded water snakes (Natrix sipedon) using Nissl and Golgi preparations; and secondly examines the relation of main olfactory bulb projections to the subdivisions of lateral cortex using Fink-Heimer and electron microscopic preparations. Lateral cortex is divided on cytoarchitectonic grounds into two major parts called rostral and caudal lateral cortex. Each part is further divided into dorsal and ventral subdivisions so that lateral cortex has a total of four subdivisions: dorsal rostral lateral cortex (drL), ventral rostral lateral cortex (vrL), dorsal caudal lateral cortex (dcL) and ventral caudal lateral cortex (vcL). Systematic analyses of Golgi preparations indicate that the rostral and caudal parts each contain distinct populations of neurons. Rostral lateral cortex contains bowl cells whose dendrites arborize widely in the outer cortical layer (layer 1). The axons of some bowl cells can be traced medially into dorsal cortex, dorsomedial cortex and medial cortex. Caudal lateral cortex contains pyramidal cells whose somata occur in layers 2 and 3 and whose dendrites extend radially up to the pial surface. In addition, three populations of neurons occur in both rostral and caudal lateral cortex. Stellate cells occur in all three layers and have dendrites which arborize in all directions. Double pyramidal cells occur primarily in layer 2 and have dendrites which form two conical fields whose long axes are oriented radially. Horizontal cells occur in layer 3 and have dendrites oriented concentric with the ependyma. Fink-Heimer preparations of snakes which underwent lesions of the main olfactory bulb show that the primary olfactory projections to cortex are bilateral and restricted precisely to rostral lateral cortex. Electron microscopic degeneration experiments indicate that the olfactory bulb fibers end as terminals which have clear, spherical vesicles and asymmetric active zones. The majority are presynaptic to dendritic spines in outer layer 1. These studies establish that lateral cortex in snakes is heterogeneous and contains two major parts, each containing two subdivisions. The rostral and caudal parts have characteristic neuronal populations. Primary olfactory input is restricted to rostral lateral cortex and seems to terminate heavily on the distal dendrites of bowl cells. Axons of some of these cells leave lateral cortex, so that the rostral lateral cortex forms a direct route by which olfactory information reaches other cortical areas. The functional role of caudal lateral cortex is not clear.  相似文献   

12.
Serial sections were used to map the ventrally positioned neurons of the anterior nerve cord of a 12.5-day amphioxus larva from the infundibular region to the end of somite 2. Synaptic patterns reveal five categories of descending pathways, four of which are associated with the ventral compartment (VC) motoneurons responsible for escape swimming. 1) Pre-, para-, and postinfundibular (tegmental) neurons with large varicosities and mixed vesicle populations provide both synaptic and paracrine input to various components of the tegmental neuropile and primary motor center. Four categories of these neurons are distinguished on the basis of their vesicles. 2) Multiple anterior sensory pathways converge on the large paired neurons (LPNs) located near the junction of somites 1 and 2. LPN synaptic output is almost exclusively contralateral. This, together with the evidence for cross-innervation between the third pair of LPNs, is consistent with the latter acting as locomotory pacemakers. 3) Axons from several classes of tegmental neurons converge in the paraxial region on each side of the cord where they form distinct tracts, the upper paraxial bundles. The right bundle is larger than the left, which suggests a role during early development when myotome contractions are biased to one side. 4) Fibers in the ventral tracts from ipsilateral projection neurons, sensory neurons, and additional ascending fibers synapse repeatedly with VC motoneurons. This may be how the overall level of excitation of the latter is controlled so as to modulate their response to pacemaker input. The fifth pathway consists of fibers involved in controlling the dorsal compartment (DC) motoneurons responsible for slow swimming, which are largely isolated from inputs to the VC locomotory system. The ventral neurons of the primary motor center form a more or less continuous file on either side of the floor plate, with certain cell types showing a tendency to cluster. There are, however, few obvious patterns of the kind expected if development were controlled by a rigid, lineage-based mechanism. The evolutionary implications of the involvement of a midbrain-level pacemaker in controlling larval swimming in amphioxus is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
To determine whether glia from different regions of the central nervous system (CNS) initiate or maintain primary dendritic growth, embryonic day 18 mouse cortical neurons were co-cultured with rat (postnatal day 4) astroglial cells derived from retina, spinal cord, mesencephalon, striatum, olfactory bulb, retina, and cortex. Axon and dendrite outgrowth from isolated neurons was quantified using morphological and immunohistochemical techniques at 18 h and 1, 3, and 5 days in vitro. Neurons initially extend the same number of neurites, regardless of the source of glial monolayer; however, glial cells differ in their ability to maintain primary dendrites. Homotypic cortical astrocytes maintain the greatest number of primary dendrites. Glia derived from the olfactory bulb and retina maintained intermediate numbers of dendrites, whereas only a small number of primary dendrites were maintained by glia derived from striatum, spinal cord, or mesencephalon. Longer axons were initially observed from neurons grown on glia that did not maintain dendrite number. Axonal length, however, was similar on the various monolayers after 5 days in vitro. Neurons that were grown in media conditioned by either mesencephalic or cortical glia for the first 24 h followed by culture media from glia of the alternate source for 4 days in vitro confirmed that glia maintained, rather than initiated, the outgrowth of the primary dendritic arbor. These results indicate that glial cells derived from various CNS regions differ in their ability to maintain the primary dendritic arbor from mouse cortical neurons in vitro. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Visceral nerves have a lot of sensitive conductors of double nature. One of them are presented by dendrites of pseudounipolar cells of cerebrospinal nodes, others - in the form of amyelinic (or, sometimes, fine myelinic) fibres - are axons of peripheral sensitive neurons (of the IId Dogil's type). By means of experimental morphological and electrod physiological analyses performed in 36 dogs, a possible connection of intraenteric neurons of the IId Dogiel's type with the spinal cord is demonstrated, at least with in the level of 5-10 thoracic segments. The centripetal fibres from the jejunum go together with the intestinal, coeliac nerves, intranodular, white and grey connective branches of the sympathetic trunk and, further - with posterior and anterior roots of the cerebrospinal nerves. The coeliac nerves serve as an important collector of the sympathetic afferents along their way from the peritoneal cavity. A part of axons of the peripheral sensitive neurons end in presynaptic buds of a terminal type on the motoneurons in the prevertebral (coeliac plexus) and the paravertebral (thoracic sympathetic trunk) sympathetic ganglia accepting the positoin of the afferent link in the systems of extracentral reflex arcs. Owing to this sign, sensitive cells of the IId Dogiel's type are justly named "sympathetic afferent neurons". Elements of the peripheral (sympathetic) afferent system are remarkable for their diffuse localization, that is corroborated by: an extreme dispersity of trophic centers (cells of the IId Dogiel' type); their axons form synapses with motor cells of numerous and sometimes unstable, individually changeable sympathetic ganglia; transfer of the centripetal sensitive fibres into the spinal cord via posterior and anterior roots.  相似文献   

15.
Features of the nervous system, especially those of the peripheral nervous system, are described in the larva of Molgula citrina . In the peripheral nervous system, antibodies raised against acetylated α–tubulins mark a pair of rostral nerves arising from 8 to 10 sensory cells in the trunk epithelium, and a pair of tail nerves. In the sensory vesicle of the trunk, a pair of antennal cells is associated with the statocyte, and a tuft of ca. 150 cilia is labelled inside the hypophysial duct. A dorsal bundle of fibres forms a plexus over the surface of the sensory vesicle which extends caudally over the visceral ganglion. The latter contains somala that were back-filled by Co2+–lysine through the cut tip of the tail. Antibodies directed against the transmitter candidates: peptides substance P, FMRFamide, somatostatin, neuropeptide Y, CGRP, VIP, and the amines: 5-HT, dopamine, noradrenaline and GABA, all failed to demonstrate immunoreactivity anywhere in the nervous system. The trunk epithelium is ciliated uniformly but lacks papillae; this is remarkable given the presence of rostral nerves. The latter are presumed to be sensory, and can be compared with those in larvaceans and the larva of amphioxus. Sensory cells in the tail nerve, if present, lack cilia. The tail nerves are lateral in this species and presumed to be motor. © 1997 The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd  相似文献   

16.
From its numerical composition, the central nervous system (CNS) of the ascidian larva is one of the simplest known nervous systems having a chordate plan. Fewer than 350 cells together constitute a caudal nerve cord, an interposed visceral ganglion containing motor circuits for swimming and, rostrally, an expanded sensory vesicle containing major sensory and interneuron regions of the CNS. Some cells are ependymal, with ciliated surfaces lining the neural canal, while others are clearly either sensory receptors or motoneurons, but most are distinguishable only on cytological grounds. Although reassignments between categories are still being made, there is evidence for determinancy of total cell number. We have made three-dimensional cell maps either from serial semithin sections, or from confocal image stacks of whole-mounted embryos and larvae stained with nuclear markers. Comparisons between the maps of neural tubes in embryos of successive ages, that is, between cells in one map and their progeny in older maps, enable us to follow the line of mitotic descent through successive maps, at least for the caudal neural tube. Details are clear for the lateral cell rows in the neural tube, at least until the latter contains approximately 320 cells, and somewhat for the dorsal cell row, but the ventral row is more complex. In the hatched larva, serial-EM reconstructions of the visceral ganglion reveal two ventrolateral fibre bundles at the caudalmost end, each of 10-12 axons. These tracts include at least five pairs of presumed motor axons running into the caudal nerve cord. Two pairs of axons decussate. Complementing this vertebrate feature in the CNS of the larval form of Ciona, we confirm that synapses form upon the somata and dendrites of its neurons, and that its motor tracts are ventral.  相似文献   

17.
The development of the dorsal ganglion of the salp, Thalia democratica, is described from electron microscope reconstructions up to the stage of central neuropile formation. The central nervous system (CNS) rudiment is initially tubular with an open central canal. Early developmental events include: (i) the formation of a thick dorsal mantle of neuroblasts from which paired dorsal paraxial neuropiles arise; (ii) the differentiation of clusters of primary motor neurons along the ventral margin of the mantle; and (iii) the development from the latter of a series of peripheral nerves. The dorsal paraxial neuropiles ultimately connect to the large central neuropile, which develops later. Direct contact between neuroblasts and muscle appears to be involved in the development of some anterior nerves. The caudal nerves responsible for innervating more distant targets in the posterior part of the body develop without such contacts, which suggests that a different patterning mechanism may be employed in this part of the neuromuscular system. The results are compared with patterns of brain organization in other chordates. Because the salp CNS is symmetrical and generally less reduced than that of ascidian larvae, it is more easily compared with the CNS of amphioxus and vertebrates. The dorsal paraxial centres in the salp resemble the dorsolateral tectal centres in amphioxus in both position and organization; the central neuropile in salps likewise resembles the translumenal system in amphioxus. The neurons themselves are similar in that many of their neurites appear to be derived from the apical surface instead of the basal surface of the cell. Such neurons, with extensively developed apical neurites, may represent a new cell type that evolved in the earliest chordates in conjunction with the formation of translumenal or intralumenal integrative centres. In comparing the salp ganglion with vertebrates, we suggest that the main core of the ganglion is most like the mes-metencephalic region of the vertebrate brain, i.e. the zone occupied by the midbrain, isthmus, and anterior hindbrain. Counterparts of more anterior regions (forebrain) and posterior ones (segmented hindbrain) appear to be absent in salps, but are found in other tunicates, suggesting that evolution has acted quite differently on the main subdivisions of the CNS in different types of tunicates.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The organization of Gn-RH systems in the brain of teleosts has been investigated previously by immunohistochemistry using antibodies against the mammalian decapeptide which differs from the teleostean factor. Here, we report the distribution of immunoreactive Gn-RH in the brain of goldfish using antibodies against synthetic teleost peptide.Immunoreactive structures are found along a column extending from the rostral olfactory bulbs to the pituitary stalk. Cell bodies are observed within the olfactory nerves and bulbs, along the ventromedial telencephalon, the ventrolateral preoptic area and the latero-basal hypothalamus. Large perikarya are detected in the dorsal midbrain tegmentum, immediately caudal to the posterior commissure. A prominent pathway was traced from the cells located in the olfactory nerves through the medial olfactory tract and along all the perikarya described above to the pituitary stalk. In the pituitary, projections are restricted to the proximal pars distalis. A second immunoreactive pathway ascends more dorsally in the telencephalon and arches to the periventricular regions of the diencephalon. Part of this pathway forms a periventricular network in the dorsal and posterior hypothalamus, whereas other projections continue caudally to the medulla oblongata and the spinal cord. Lesions of the ventral preoptic area demonstrate that most of the fibers detected in the pituitary originate from the preoptic region.  相似文献   

19.
By means of whole-mount immunohistochemistry, putative inhibitory (GABAergic) neural structures were identified in the central and peripheral nervous system of the tubificid worm, Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri. In the supraoesophageal ganglion (brain) only few strongly labelled cells were observed. However, in its commissural part a high number of stained nerve fibres, arising mainly from the ventral nerve cord and prostomium, occurred. Except for the suboesophageal ganglion the arrangement of γ-amino butyric acid-immunoreactive (GABA-IR) structures proved to be identical in each VNC ganglion. Behind the first segmental nerves three pairs of heavily stained neurones were located. Their processes (both ipsi- and contralateral) form four bundles of fine-fibred polysegmental interneuronal tracts that run close to the dorsal giant axons from the terminal ganglion to the suboesophageal one without interruption. A few small motoneurons and a pair of large ones with contralateral processes were also identified. A bipolar (presumably sensory) neuron was located at the root of each second segmental nerve. GABA-IR neurons were also found in the stomatogastric ganglia and pharyngeal wall; however, the latter structure had a well-developed fibre network, as well. Present results suggest that GABA acts as a common neurotransmitter in sensory, interneuronal and motor system of L. hoffmeisteri. The possible functional role of the identified GABA-IR neural structures in locomotion, escape and withdrawal reflexes in tubificid worms is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
In order to determine how nociceptive input conveyed by the C-fibers terminating in superficial lam-inae of the spinal cord reaches the wide dynamic range (WDR) cells in deeper dorsal horn, which functions as ascend-ing projection pathway, the morphological features of some WDR cells in the deeper dorsal horn of the cat lumbar spinal cord were studied by intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase and physiological characterization. One of the fully stained neurons with somata in lamina V and dendrites that entered lamina Ⅱ were examined by electron mi-croscopy. Immunogold staining of ultrathin sections through the labeled proximal dendrites in lamina Ⅱ revealed that these dendrites received numerous synapses from substance P and glutamate immunoreactive (IR) axons, which were considered originating from C-fibers. In addition, many GABA-IR terminals were found presynaptic to the labeled dendrites. The results, therefore, suggest that the information carried by primary afferent can be sent from t  相似文献   

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