Morphology and morphometry of motor endings on macaque intrafusal fibers |
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Authors: | V Sahgal V Subramani S Sahgal |
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Affiliation: | Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Northwestern University Medical School, Illinois 60611. |
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Abstract: | The ultrastructural studies have shown three types of motor endings in the macaque intrafusal fibers: 1) unindented axon terminals with smooth or shallowly folded postsynaptic membrane; 2) indented terminals with few postsynaptic folds; and 3) indented terminals with heavily folded postsynaptic membrane. The terminals on bag 1 and chain fibers were generally more indented than those on the bag 2 fibers. Deeply indented terminals with highly folded postsynaptic membranes were noticed on the bag 1 and chain endings in spindles from lumbrical but not the biceps muscle. In the individual intrafusal fibers from the biceps and lumbrical spindles, the degree of indentation did not correlate with the extent of postsynaptic folding (P greater than .01). Endings on bag 1 and chain fibers in the lumbrical spindles showed a positive correlation between indentation of terminals and their distance from the primary sensory endings (P less than .01), whereas the lumbrical bag 2 endings and the biceps intrafusal endings did not (P greater than .01). The shape of the intrafusal motor endings thus is independent of their location but dependent on the type of intrafusal fibers. |
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