Comparative Study of the Monoamine Neuron System in the Spinal Cord of the Lamprey and Hagfish

Abstract
Spinal cords of the lamprey and hagfish were examined by fluorescence histochemistry and EM. Yellow fluorescence bound to small to medium sized neurons was observed ventrally to the central canal of both cyclostomes. In the lamprey only, weakly blue-green fluorescent subependymal cells were seen just beneath the central canal. In the ventral floor of their spinal cord, yellow fluorescent varicosities were observed; their density was much higher in the lamprey than in the hagfish. The lateral surface of the hagfish spinal cord was marginated by a chain of yellow fluorescent varicosities. The yellow fluorescence was microspectrofluorometrically identified as fluorescence due to 5-HT [5-hydroxytryptamine]. The 5-HT neurons contained many large dense-core vesicles as seen by EM. The 5-HT varicosities or terminals seen in the ventral zone of both cyclostomes possessed the large dense-core vesicles and small clear synaptic vesicles, which appeared as small dense-core vesicles after KMnO4 fixation. The terminal of the lamprey was nakedly situated on the ventral surface, while that of the hagfish was always covered by the superficial glial layer. Lamprey and hagfish should be divided into 2 different classes.

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