The angular acceleration receptor system of the statocyst of Octopus vulgaris : morphometry, ultrastructure, and neuronal and synaptic organization
- 11 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences
- Vol. 315 (1174) , 305-343
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1987.0010
Abstract
The angular acceleration receptor system (crista/cupula system) of the statocyst of Octopus vulgaris has been thoroughly reinvestigated, and detailed information is presented regarding its morphometry, ultrastructure, and neuronal and synaptic organization. In each of the nine crista sections, some receptor hair cells are primary sensory cells with an axon extending from their base. Also, there are large and small secondary sensory hair cells without axons, which make afferent synapses with large and small first-order afferent neurons. The afferent synapses are of two morphologically distinct types, having either a finger-like or a flat postsynaptic process; both can be seen in the same hair cell. In addition to the afferents, there is a dense plexus of efferent fibres in each crista section, and efferent synapses can be seen at the level of the hair cells and of the neurons. The morphometric analysis of the nine crista sections shows obvious differences between the odd-numbered (C1, C3, C5, C7, C9) and the even-numbered (C2, C4, C6, C8) crista sections: they differ in length, in the number of the small primary sensory cells and in the number of the small first-order afferent neurons. Centrifugal cobalt filling of the three crista nerves revealed a disproportionate innervation of the nine crista sections: the anterior crista nerve innervates section C1 and the first half of section C2, the medial crista nerve innervates the second half of section C2, sections C3, C4, C5, and the first half of section C6, and the posterior crista nerve innervates the second half of section C6, and sections C7, C8 and C9. In each of the three crista nerves, only 25% of the total number of axons are afferent fibres, the remaining 75 % are efferent. To each of the nine crista sections a cupula is attached. In the form and size of the cupulae there is again a conspicuous difference between the odd and the even crista sections: a small widebased cupula is attached to each of the odd crista sections, whereas the even crista sections each have a large narrow-based cupula with a small area of attachment. The results are discussed with reference to their functional consequences.Keywords
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