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1.
The abdominal nerve cord of Periplaneta americana was studied utilizing light and electron microscopes. In the nerve cells, delicate granules, similar to those probably responsible for cytoplasmic basophilia, are evenly distributed in "dark" cells and clumped in "light" cells. Neuroglial cells are stained metachromatically by cresyl violet. The neuroglial cells have many processes which ramify extensively and are enmeshed to form overlapping layers. These imbricated processes ensheath the nerve cells; the inner layer of the sheath penetrates into the neuron and is responsible for the appearance of the trophospongium of Holmgren. Nerve fibers are embedded within glial cells and surrounded by extensions of the plasma membrane similar to mesaxons. Depending on their size, two or several nerve fibers may share a single glial cell. Nerve fibers near their terminations on other nerve fibers contain particles and numerous, large mitochondria. The ganglion is ensheathed by a thick feltwork of connective tissue and perilemmal cells. The abdominal connective has a thinner connective tissue sheath which is without perilemmal cells. The nerve fibers and sheaths in the connective become thinner as they pass through ganglia.  相似文献   

2.
Light and electron microscopy of the pacemaker ganglion of the scorpion heart indicate that it is about 15 mm long and 50 μm in diameter and extends along the dorsal midline of the heart. The largest cell bodies (30–45 μm in diameter) occur in clusters along the length of the ganglion. The ganglion appears to be innervated with fibers from the subesophageal and first three abdominal ganglia. The cardiac ganglion is surrounded by a neurilemma and a membranous sheath. The latter is apparently derived from connective tissue cells seen outside the ganglion. Nerve fibers other than those in the neuropil areas are usually surrounded by membrane and cytoplasm of glial cells. Often there are several layers of glial membrane, forming a loose myelin. The cardiac nerves to the heart muscle are also surrounded by a neurilemma, and the axons are surrounded by glia. The motor nerves contain lucent vesicles 60–100 nm and opaque granules 120–180 nm in diameter. In the cardiac ganglion, some nerve cell bodies have complex invaginations of glial processes forming a peripheral trophospongium. In the neuropil areas, nerve cell processes are often in close apposition. The septilaminar configuration typical of gap junctions is common, with gap distances of 1–4 nm. In tissues stained with lanthanum phosphate during fixation, we found gaps with unstained connections (1–2 nm diameter) between nerve-nerve and glial-nerve cell processes. Annular or double-membrane vesicles in various stages of formation were also seen in some nerve fibers in ganglia stained with lanthanum phosphate. Nerve endings with electron-lucent vesicles 40–60 nm in diameter are abundant in the cardiac ganglion, suggesting that these contain the excitatory transmitter of intrinsic neurons of the ganglion. Less abundant are fibers with membrane-limited opaque granules, circular or oblong in shape and as much as 330 nm in their longest dimension. Also seen were some nerve endings with both vesicles and granules.  相似文献   

3.
Summary This is a preliminary electron microscope investigation in which the structure of insect neurons, neuropile, and interganglionic fibers are studied.Neurons of insect are pear-shaped and have an unique prolongation which ramifies into the neuropile. Their soma is surrounded by glial prolongations that exclude the possibility of nervous contacts. The neuronal cytoplasm is rich in granular material similar to the one described as R.N.A. by several authors; it is scattered at random or associated with endoplasmic reticulum cysternae. The latter does not adopt the regular array characterizing the vertebrate Nissl bodies.A large number of naked fibers is seen in the neuropile. The content of these fibers is different in fibers of different diameter. The thinner elements appear light and show a loose reticular matrix, few vesicles, and mitochondria. The thick fibers are characterized by a denser neuroplasm constituted by a reticular matrix and rows of tiny vesicles alternating with profils of tubuli. In some of these fibers the tubuli are seen in a central position.Three main types of contact relationships between fibers are described in the neuropile. These are; a) cross contacts; b) longitudinal contacts; and c) endknob contacts. The first type is in turn subdivided into subtypes, namely: minimum-area cross contacts and maximum-area cross contacts.A glial sheath enveloping each connective nerve fiber is described. Inside the cytoplasm of such cells there are bundles of dense, thin fibrils twisted along the nerve fibers.The criteria maintained by several authors in regard to the fine structure of the synaptic region are discussed and compared with facts reported in this paper.  相似文献   

4.
In view of reports that the nerve fibers of the sea prawn conduct impulses more rapidly than other invertebrate nerves and look like myelinated vertebrate nerves in the light microscope, prawn nerve fibers were studied with the electron microscope. Their sheaths are found to have a consistent and unique structure that is unlike vertebrate myelin in four respects: (1) The sheath is composed of 10 to 50 thin (200- to 1000-A) layers or laminae; each lamina is a cellular process that contains cytoplasm and wraps concentrically around the axon. The laminae do not connect to form a spiral; in fact, no cytoplasmic continuity has been demonstrated among them. (2) Nuclei of sheath cells occur only in the innermost lamina of the sheath; thus, they lie between the sheath and the axon rather than outside the sheath as in vertebrate myelinated fibers. (3) In regions in which the structural integrity of the sheath is most prominent, radially oriented stacks of desmosomes are formed between adjacent laminae. (4) An ~200-A extracellular gap occurs around the axon and between the innermost sheath laminae, but it is separated from surrounding extracellular spaces by gap closure between the outer sheath laminae, as the membranes of adjacent laminae adhere to form external compound membranes (ECM's). Sheaths are interrupted periodically to form nodes, analogous to vertebrate nodes of Ranvier, where a new type of glial cell called the "nodal cell" loosely enmeshes the axon and intermittently forms tight junctions (ECM's) with it. This nodal cell, in turn, forms tight junctions with other glial cells which ramify widely within the cord, suggesting the possibility of functional axon-glia interaction.  相似文献   

5.
Hemocytes, which contain large cytoplasmic granules, invade the multilamellate glial sheath of ventral ganglion nerve roots of the crayfish following surgical interruption of these nerves. Electron microscopic examination of sections of plasticembedded tissues and replicas of freeze-cleaved ganglion roots reveals numerous slender cytoplasmic extensions of the hemocytes present in damaged nerve sheaths. Many of these microvillous extensions contact glial cells and filamentous extracellular masses. At sites of contact, the microvilli are flattened and occasionally electron-dense material is present in the hemocyte cytoplasm subjacent to the plasma membrane that is closely apposed to a glial cell or connective tissue. Intramembranous surfaces of hemocyte plasmalemmae exposed by freeze-fracture, exhibit particle aggregates 700–2500 Å in diameter. Individual particles are 95–105 Å in diameter. Since the particle aggregates correspond in overall dimension and position in the cell to the sites of contact of hemocyte processes with other sheath components, it is assumed that the two structures are equivalent and represent a junctional complex very similar in structure to some hemidesmosomes. Results from this study strongly suggest that granulated crustacean hemocytes, in response to surgical injury of nerves, invade the damaged nerve sheath and identify damaged glial cells and connective tissue by forming slender cytoplasmic processes which contact elements of the sheath. Tissue components contacted by the hemocytes may subsequently be phagocytosed by them. This is the first report of an invertebrate hemocyte-mediated response to tissue damage in which evidence is presented that the hemocyte may identify necrotic cells and extracellular matrix by forming junctional complexes with them. Crustacean hemocytes, therefore, are likely much more complex functionally than has been previously estimated.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The epineural connective tissue sheath investing the subesophageal ganglion of Helix aspersa consists of a superficial region and a deeper region. The superficial region contains masses of globular cells intermingled with smooth muscle cells and nerve fibers all embedded in a connective tissue matrix. The histochemical and fine structural features of the globular cells show seasonal changes. During autumn to winter glycogen accumulates in their cytoplasm; this accumulation is accompanied by the appearance of dense, cytoplasmic globules which fuse together and ultimately form large pools of granular material. All the organelles and cytoplasm are displaced towards the cell periphery. Various cell-membrane invaginations containing dense material are prominent but there is no direct evidence to link these structures with the uptake of metabolites for glycogenesis. In winter there is a concentration of homogeneous, membrane-bound inclusions in the vicinity of the Golgi bodies. It is suggested that these inclusions constitute a lipid store. They decrease in number during summer. The globular cells do not bear any intimate relation to neurons and there is no reason to include these cells in the neuroglia. The muscle cells often weave around the globular cells but there is no direct contact. Nerve fibers innervate at least some of the muscle cells. The connective tissue consists of large and small diameter fibers suggesting that maturation of the fibrous components of the intercellular matrix is taking place in the superficial regions of the epineural sheath.This work has been supported by the Australian Research Grants Committee.  相似文献   

7.
Baŀuk  P.  Fujiwara  T.  Matsuda  S. 《Cell and tissue research》1985,239(1):51-60
Summary The parasympathetic ganglia of the guinea-pig trachea have been investigated by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. They are covered by a continuous perineurium and connective tissue is found between the neural elements. Blood vessels inside the ganglia have continuous endothelia and are sometimes accompanied by pericytes and a sheath of perineurial cells. Individual neuronal cell bodies and large processes are almost completely covered by a thin layer of satellite cells, except for very small areas that directly face the basal lamina and connective tissue space. Nerve fibres are also completely and individually ensheathed by Schwann cell processes; naked fibres are not found. In some regions of the nerve cell body, there are complex interdigitations between short neuronal processes and satellite cells. Large differences in the size of neurons may indicate the presence of different neuronal populations. Nerve endings containing mainly small clear vesicles are the most common type, and these form synapses on dendrites, but some profiles have many large granular vesicles. These ganglia resemble other parasympathetic, sympathetic and sensory ganglia and not the enteric ganglia. However, an unusual feature of the cytoplasm of the satellite and Schwann cells is the abundance of 10 nm intermediate filaments.  相似文献   

8.
P Mestres  M Diener  W Rummel 《Acta anatomica》1992,143(4):275-282
The ultrastructure of neurons, glial cells and axons of the mucosal plexus of the rat colon descendens was studied. Serial semithin sections and a re-embedding technique were used in order to localize the ganglia. The ganglia are free of blood vessels and connective tissue. The ratio of neurons to glial cells is approximately 1. Ganglia and nerve strands are enclosed by a basement membrane, without a well-defined perineural connective tissue. The neurons show a structure similar to other enteric plexus. Synaptic contacts were observed frequently in the neuropil, where nerve endings and varicosities show a diverse outfit in vesicles. The glial cells, which contain immunocytochemically detectable glial fibrillary protein, possess the same ultrastructural attributes in the intra- and extraganglionic localizations. In the nerves, axonic profiles and varicosities appear in close relation with glial cells or their processes. The distance between the nerves and their target cells, i.e. the enterocytes, is 0.5 microns or more with interposed basement membranes and fibroblasts.  相似文献   

9.
Lymph node nerve endings have been studied in 1- to 48-day-old mice. Serial sections of Epon-embedded lymph nodes were observed under the electron microscope to find the nerve endings. Most lymph node nerve fibers finally reach the smooth muscle cells of arterioles and muscular venules. Both kinds of vascular endings are similar, although endings are less numerous on venules. Nerve endings consist of one or more nerve processes surrounded by a usually incomplete Schwann cell sheath; frequently, axons show wide areas directly facing the muscle cells. The distance between such a naked axon and a myocyte ranges from 100 to 800 nm. Small granulated and clear vesicles are especially abundant in varicosities of nerve processes that are located very close to muscle cells. Nerve endings of lymph node vasculature probably correspond to vasomotor sympathetic adrenergic endings, regulating the degree of contraction of vessels which have a muscular layer. Other kinds of nerve endings also exist in lymph nodes: some axons appear free in the stroma and contact the surfaces of reticular cells; the latter also extend delicate cytoplasmic processes that surround the axons. The functional significance of nerve cell-reticular cell contacts is unknown.  相似文献   

10.
This paper reports observations on the innervation of gill filaments of the lamprey, Lampetra japonica. Nerve fibers run on each side of the afferent filament artery (AFA nerve) and in the connective tissue compartment along the efferent filament artery (EFA nerve). The AFA nerve supplies vasomotor fibers to the afferent filament artery and arteriovenous anastomoses and special visceral motor fibers to branchial muscle fibers (musculus compressor branchialis circularis). Nerve endings of the vasomotor fibers contain large, cored vesicles (60–180 nm in diameter) with a variable number of small, clear vesicles (30–70 μm in diameter), whereas those of the visceral motor fibers have many small, clear vesicles with few large, cored vesicles. The EFA nerve supplies vasomotor fibers to the efferent filament artery. Their endings, containing mixtures of predominantly large, cored vesicles and small, clear vesicles make close synaptic contacts with reticular cells. The latter in turn are connected with each other or with smooth muscle cells in the wall of the efferent filament artery by nexuses. No nerves are found in the axial plate between the afferent and efferent filament arteries nor in the secondary lamellae of individual gill filaments. No afferent nerve supply to the gill filament has been found.  相似文献   

11.
The connectives above and below the second thoracic ganglion and nerves to and from the mesothoracic leg were severed in Periplaneta americana. Isolated ganglia and severed nerve cord were examined in the electron microscope. In the connectives, sheaths of degenerating fibers remain continuous but become thicker and more dense. There is increase in number and more haphazard disposition of the neuroglial processes which ensheath the axons. The cytoplasm contains vacuoles. Dense droplets normally intercalated between the layers of neuroglial processes ensheathing the axons are strikingly increased in number. The axoplasm with its organelles forms dense clumps. Mitochondria in axons are enlarged, the intramitochondrial matrix is more dense, and the internal folds are disorganized. In ganglia, mitochondrial changes in terminal parts of the axons appear similar to those described in the parent axons in the connective. The synaptic portions of nerve fibers appear very dense. Alterations of the sheath are minimal. Synaptic particles in the degenerating axoplasmic coagulum undergo only slight morphological changes and are still present up to 6 days after severance of their nerve fibers. It is difficult to assess whether there are any alterations in the total number of synaptic particles during degeneration.  相似文献   

12.
Summary We have studied the layers of the muscular coat of the guinea-pig small intestine after enzymatic and chemical removal of extracellular connective tissue. The cells of the longitudinal muscle layer are wider, have rougher surfaces, more finger-like processes and more complex terminations, but fewer intercellular junctions than cells in the circular muscle layer. A special layer of wide, flat cells with a dense innervation exists at the inner margin of the circular muscle layer, facing the submucosa. The ganglia of the myenteric and submucosal plexuses are covered by a smooth basal lamina, a delicate feltwork of collagen fibrils, and innumerable connective tissue cells. The neuronal and glial cell processes at the surface of ganglia form an interlocking mosaic, which is loosely packed in newborn and young animals, but becomes tightly packed in adults. The arrangement of glial cells becomes progressively looser along finer nerve bundles. Single varicose nerve fibres are rarely exposed, but multiaxonal bundles are common. Fibroblast-like cells of characteristic shape and orientation are found in the serosa; around nerve ganglia; in the intermuscular connective tissue layer and in the circular muscle, where they bridge nerve bundles and muscle cells; at the submucosal face of the special, flattened inner circular muscle layer; and in the submucosa. Some of these fibroblast like cells correspond to interstitial cells of Cajal. Other structures readily visualized by scanning electron microscopy are blood and lymphatic vessels and their periendothelial cells. The relationship of cellular elements to connective tissue was studied with three different preparative procedures: (1) freeze-cracked specimens of intact, undigested intestine; (2) stretch preparations of longitudinal muscle with adhering myenteric plexus; (3) sheets of submucosal collagen bundles from which all cellular elements had been removed by prolonged detergent extraction.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The innervation of the anococcygeus muscle of the rat was investigated with regard to the histochemical features of nerve fibers within the muscle and to the location of the postganglionic autonomic neurons which are the source of these fibers. Acetylcholinesterase-positive fibers and catecholaminergic fibers are abundant in the anococcygeus as well as the related retractor penis muscle. Neuronal somata, either between muscle bundles of the anococcygeus or in the connective tissue sheath, are also acetylcholinesterase-positive. Nerve fibers and a minority of the ganglion cells in the anococcygeus and retractor penis muscles are immunoreactive for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. Injection of the retrogradely transported dye Fluorogold into the anococcygeus muscle filled neurons in the abdominopelvic sympathetic chain, pelvic plexus and a small number of neurons in the inferior mesenteric ganglion. In the pelvic plexus, some neurons were located in the major pelvic ganglion but most were found along the main penile nerve and its branches to the anococcygeus muscle. Immunocytochemistry of these identified neurons indicates that about one half of them are positive for vasoactive intestinal polypeptice. These results raise the possibility that both acetylcholine and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide are important neurotransmitters in autonomic nerves to the anococcygeus muscle.  相似文献   

14.
The histological structure of cephalothoracic and abdominal integuments has been studied in the hermit crab Pagurus bernhardus (L.). In the branchial region of the carapace, the integument shows a similar structure as described hitherto in a number of other decapod species; there are a thin epicuticle, an exocuticle, and a relatively thick endocuticle, followed by a layer of columnar epithelium and underlying connective tissue. This pattern is repeated on the inner surface of the carapace fold but with generally thinner cuticular layers. Within the connective tissue there are tegumental glands, haemocytes, and some reserve inclusions. The abdominal integument shows a modified cuticle structure which is probably related to its specific function as an adhesive organ attaching the hermit crab to the inner surface of the gastropod shell. The cuticle is uncalcified and it shows deep wrinkles and grooves. Endocuticle and exocuticle are thick and layered whereas the epicuticle is very thin. Large funnel-shaped ducts with secretions occur frequently in the abdominal integument. The cells that are responsible for these secretions are described. The chemical nature of integumental structures has been studied with histochemical tests.  相似文献   

15.
Blanco RE 《Tissue & cell》1988,20(5):771-782
The ultrastructural organization and the junctional complexes of peripheral nerves have been investigated in the cockroach Periplaneta americana. Nerve 5 is surrounded by a layer of connective tissue, the neural lamella, beneath which is a layer of perineurial glial cells wrapping the axons. Adjacent perineurial cells are joined to one another by septate, gap and tight junctions. Septate and gap junctions were observed in freeze-fracture replicas of main trunk nerve 5. Septate junctions were found as rows of PF particles mainly in perineurial cell membranes. Gap junctions exhibited EF macular aggregates in perineurial and subperineurial glial cells. During incubations in vivo with extracellularly applied ionic lanthanum, the lanthanum did not penetrate beyond the perineurium. Where nerve 5 branches and contacts the muscle, lanthanum penetrated freely between the muscle fibres and the nerve branches. In small peripheral branches where the axons are surrounded by single a glial layer, lanthanum is unable to penetrate to the axolemma.  相似文献   

16.
The intravital deposition of silver in the chorioid plexuses, area postrema, intercolumnar tubercle, neurohypophysis, and pineal body of rats, given 1.5 gm. of silver nitrate per liter of drinking water for periods of up to one year, has been investigated by electron microscopy. Unlike other parts of the central nervous system, these regions store large amounts of silver. In all of these structures, silver is deposited in the form of dense granules in the basement membrane upon which the capillary endothelium rests, in and upon the connective tissue cells and fibers constituting a loose pericapillary sheath, and in an outer membrane separating this sheath from the parenchymatous cells. Parts of the central nervous system which do not store silver, for example the spinal cord, cerebellar cortex, cerebral cortex, and reticular formation, lack a connective tissue investment of the capillaries. In these locations, the glial processes or end-feet are closely applied to the walls of the capillaries. Only a narrow space, filled by an amorphous, moderately electron-dense substance, separates the plasma membranes of the endothelial cells and glial processes. The significance of these observations is discussed with respect to the questions of the Virchow-Robin perivascular spaces, the interstitial ground-substance of the brain, and the location of the hematoencephalic barrier.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The distribution, morphology and synaptic connections of the hindgut efferent neurons in the last (sixth) abdominal ganglion of the crayfish, Orconectes limosus, have been investigated using light and electron microscopy in conjunction with retrograde cobalt/nickel and HRP labeling through the intestinal nerve. The hindgut efferent neurons occur singly and in clusters, and are unipolar. Their axonal projections are uniform and consist of a thick primary neurite with typical lateral projections and limited arborization of varicose fibers in the ganglionic neuropil. They also send lower order axon processes to the ganglionic neural sheath, where they arborize profusely, forming a network of varicose fibers. The majority of the efferent neurons project to the anterior part of the hindgut. HRP-labeled axon profiles are found in both pre- and postsynaptic position in the neuropil of the ganglion. HRP-labeled axon profiles also establish pre- and postsynaptic contacts in the intestinal nerve root. All hindgut efferent terminals contain similar synaptic vesicle populations: ovoid agranular vesicles (50–60 nm) and a few large granular vesicles (100–200 nm). It is suggested that the hindgut efferent neurons in the last abdominal ganglion are involved in: (1) innervation of the hindgut; (2) central integrative processes; (3) en route synaptic modification of efferent and afferent signals in the intestinal nerve; (4) neurohumoral modulation of peripheral physiological processes.Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung  相似文献   

18.
Summary Ultrastructural observations of the giant axon of Myxicola infundibulum reveal that the axoplasm contains neurofilaments, a few neurotubules and mitochondria. Finger-like projections issuing from the glial cells of the sheath encircle the giant axon at various angles. The space between the axolemma and sheath is 125 Å. Branches of the giant axon are also surrounded by a glial sheath as they course through the neuropil. Some branches of the giant axon seem to fuse with certain neurons, creating a syncytial arrangement between the giant axon and these neurons.Many small nerve fibers course longitudinally in the neuropil of the nerve cord. Most of these axons are separated from each other by a space of 200 Å without intervening glial processes. Synapses in the neuropil have both clear 600 Å vesicles and larger dense core vesicles suggesting chemical transmission. Some, but not all, of the synaptic areas show thickened membranes and dense material in the synaptic cleft.This study was supported in part by PHS NS-07740 to R.L.P., J.A.B. is a NDEA Predoctoral Fellow in the Department of Physiology.  相似文献   

19.
The neuromuscular junctions of a fast coxal adductor of Gromphadorhina portentosa show great variability in both axon terminal diameter and extent of post-junctional sarcoplasmic specializaton. Finestructural equivalents of both cone and brush type nerve endings are present. The large motor axons innervating this muscle are surrounded by a pervasive lemnoblast sheath, leaving the axon surface exposed only in the area of synaptic contact. Connective tissue covers the nerve and fills the spaces between sheath cell processes in the nerve trunk, but is lost after it enters the muscle. The role of sheath cells in nerve function is discussed in the light of these findings.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The fine structure of the neural sheath, glial cells and nerve cells in the brain of adult male houseflies is described. The neural sheath is composed of neural lamella and perineurium. The neural lamella consists of an external lamina and collagen-like fibrils which are embedded in an amorphous matrix. The perineurial cells form a continuous layer around the brain. On their inner surface, perineurial cells form junctional complexes with glial cell processes. A cortical cellular layer composed of neurons and glial cells surrounds the centrally located neuropil. Three types of glial cells are identified. Glial cells differ in size and in relative development and distribution of organelles. Thin processes of glioplasm completely surround the cell bodies of the neurons. Five types of neurons are described. Most of the neurons are monopolar, a few are bipolar.Supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation  相似文献   

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