scholarly journals MUSCLE TENSION AND REFLEXES IN THE EARTHWORM

1923 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 327-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Moore

1. By the use of preparations of earthworm in which the cutaneous receptors have been anesthetized with a solution of M/8 MgCl2, it is shown that peristalsis can be initiated by tension alone. 2. The receptors of the tension reflex are the intermyal sensory cells of the ventral region of the body wall. 3. It is concluded that Straub obtained the tension reflex because his preparations contained the intermyal receptors; Budington was unable to observe the tension reflex in any preparation from which the intermyal receptors had been removed. 4. Intermyal receptors are the receptors of the following reaction: Passive unilateral tension of the posterior part of an earthworm induces active homolateral tension of the musculature of the anterior segments, and results in the course of progress being brought into line with the enforced orientation of the tail. This reaction is termed the homostrophic reflex. 5. The receptors for the reaction are distributed throughout the entire length of the worm, the effectors are limited to the anterior 15 to 20 segments. The impulse is conducted by the ventral nerve cord. 6. The interaction of the homostrophic reflex and tropisms is considered.

1985 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-188
Author(s):  
E. A. Debski ◽  
W. O. Friesen

Tactile stimulation (light stroking) of a body wall flap attached to the ventral nerve cord of the medicinal leech evokes episodes of swimming activity. This swimming response undergoes habituation, involving changes in swim initiation and swim maintenance. Repeated stimulation of the body wall flap evoked swimming activity between three and 39 times before this response failed. During repetitive stimulation, the length of swim episodes decreased by about 50%. The number of swim episodes which could be elicited was not correlated with swim episode length. Following habituation, swim initiation showed significant spontaneous recovery, but swim episode length returned only to 60% of control values. In preparations where spontaneous recovery was followed by rehabituation, the number of swim episodes elicited declined with each habituation-recovery sequence. Additional stimulation immediately following habituation trials had a dual effect: recovery of the swimming response was delayed, but the lengths of swim episodes following spontaneous recovery were increased. Pinching the body wall flap immediately restored the swimming response in an habituated preparation. Swim initiation habituated more rapidly during stimulation of anterior body wall flaps than during stimulation of mid-body or posterior flaps. However, swim length was independent of this regional variation in swim responsiveness. The number of swim episodes elicited by stimulation of body wall flaps attached to posterior or anterior segments depended upon whether this segment was stimulated before or after other flaps. In contrast, in mid-body segments there was no evidence for such stimulus generalization. The lengths of swim episodes elicited during sequential stimulation of several body wall flaps were independent of the stimulation sequence. We propose that separate processes control swim initiation and swim maintenance. These processes must be repeated in most, if not all, of the segmental ganglia of the leech ventral nerve cord.


Genetics ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 157 (4) ◽  
pp. 1611-1622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Go Shioi ◽  
Michinari Shoji ◽  
Masashi Nakamura ◽  
Takeshi Ishihara ◽  
Isao Katsura ◽  
...  

Abstract Using a pan-neuronal GFP marker, a morphological screen was performed to detect Caenorhabditis elegans larval lethal mutants with severely disorganized major nerve cords. We recovered and characterized 21 mutants that displayed displacement or detachment of the ventral nerve cord from the body wall (Ven: ventral cord abnormal). Six mutations defined three novel genetic loci: ven-1, ven-2, and ven-3. Fifteen mutations proved to be alleles of previously identified muscle attachment/positioning genes, mup-4, mua-1, mua-5, and mua-6. All the mutants also displayed muscle attachment/positioning defects characteristic of mua/mup mutants. The pan-neuronal GFP marker also revealed that mutants of other mua/mup loci, such as mup-1, mup-2, and mua-2, exhibited the Ven defect. The hypodermis, the excretory canal, and the gonad were morphologically abnormal in some of the mutants. The pleiotropic nature of the defects indicates that ven and mua/mup genes are required generally for the maintenance of attachment of tissues to the body wall in C. elegans.


1969 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. LAVERACK

1. Mechanoreceptors in the body wall of the leech Hirudo are stimulated by deformation of the animal's surface. They respond at all frequencies of stimulation up to about 50-60 Hz. 2. Light flashes, from a microscope lamp or an electronic flash source, are also a potent means of peripheral stimulation. 3. After peripheral stimulation impulses can be recorded in a fast central pathway. This pathway conducts equally well in the posterior to anterior and in the opposite directions. 4. Interference with either the right or left connective linking any two segmental ganglia does not interrupt the rapid conduction of these impulses. 5. Severance of the median connective or Faivre's nerve interrupts conduction. This seems to implicate at least one, and possibly more, of the nerve fibres of this median connective in the rapid transmission of information from the extremities of the body. 6. A slower conducting pathway also exists in the nerve cord.


1893 ◽  
Vol s2-34 (136) ◽  
pp. 403-426
Author(s):  
EDGAR J. ALLEN

1. The green gland of Palæmonetes (and Palæmon) at the time of hatching of the larva has not developed a lumen, although the external opening can be detected. When the larva leaves the egg the lumen commences to open, and the gland consists of an end-sac and a U-shaped tube, of which the distal portion gives rise to the bladder. The bladder then enlarges greatly, growing at first inwards towards the middle ventral line, then upwards, within the oesophageal nerve-ring and anterior to the oesophagus, to the middle dorsal line, where it meets its fellow of the opposite side. The two bladders grow backwards over the stomach and beneath the dorsal sac, subsequently fusing together in the middle line to form the unpaired nephro-peritoneal sac. 2. The shell-glands are the functional excretory organs at the time of hatching and during the latter part of the embryonal period. They open at the bases of the second maxillæ, and each consists of an end-sac and a Y-shaped renal tube, which have the typical structure of a crustacean nephridium. 3. A dorsal sac, which is completely enclosed by an epithelial lining, persists in adults of Palsem on, Palæmonetes, and Crangon. This sac, which does not contain blood, lies upon the nephro-peritoneal sac and the front end of the ovary, being much enlarged at its posterior end. The cephalic aorta (ophthalmic artery) lies within the dorsal sac. 4. At its anterior end the dorsal sac is surrounded by a mass of tissue which appears to be producing blood-corpuscles. 5. The dorsal sac is formed as a hollowing out in masses of mesoderm-cells, which lie on either side of the cephalic aorta. Two lateral cavities are thus formed, which increase in size and unite below the aorta. Taking into account this mode of development, a comparison with Peripatus shows that the dorsal sac is homologous with the dorsal portions of the mesoblastic somites of that animal, and must therefore be regarded as a true cœlom. 6. The body-cavity of these Crustaceans varies in different regions. (a) In the anterior part of the thorax it consists of a true cœlom (the dorsal sac and nephridia) and a hæmocœle. The hæmocœle consists of (1) a central cavity, in which the stomach and intestine, the liver and the nerve-cord lie; (2) two lateral cavities, which contain the end-sac and proximal end of the tube of the shell-gland, and which communicate with the central cavity and with the cavities of the legs; and (3) these leg-cavities, which, in the second maxillæ, contain the tube of the shell-gland. (b) In the posterior part of the thorax the body-cavity is entirely a hæmocœle. It consists of (1) the pericardial cavity, in which lies (2) the heart, and which is separated by the pericardial septum from (3) the central cavity of the body, which contains the genital organs, liver, intestine, and nerve-cord; (4) the lateral cavities, which communicate with the central cavity and with (5) the cavities of the legs. (c) In the abdomen the body-cavity is entirely a hæmocœle. It consists of a dorsal and a ventral sinus, which communicate with one another by lateral sinuses.


Development ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 126 (20) ◽  
pp. 4489-4498 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.M. Knobel ◽  
E.M. Jorgensen ◽  
M.J. Bastiani

During nervous system development, neurons form synaptic contacts with distant target cells. These connections are formed by the extension of axonal processes along predetermined pathways. Axon outgrowth is directed by growth cones located at the tips of these neuronal processes. Although the behavior of growth cones has been well-characterized in vitro, it is difficult to observe growth cones in vivo. We have observed motor neuron growth cones migrating in living Caenorhabditis elegans larvae using time-lapse confocal microscopy. Specifically, we observed the VD motor neurons extend axons from the ventral to dorsal nerve cord during the L2 stage. The growth cones of these neurons are round and migrate rapidly across the epidermis if they are unobstructed. When they contact axons of the lateral nerve fascicles, growth cones stall and spread out along the fascicle to form anvil-shaped structures. After pausing for a few minutes, they extend lamellipodia beyond the fascicle and resume migration toward the dorsal nerve cord. Growth cones stall again when they contact the body wall muscles. These muscles are tightly attached to the epidermis by narrowly spaced circumferential attachment structures. Stalled growth cones extend fingers dorsally between these hypodermal attachment structures. When a single finger has projected through the body wall muscle quadrant, the growth cone located on the ventral side of the muscle collapses and a new growth cone forms at the dorsal tip of the predominating finger. Thus, we observe that complete growth cone collapse occurs in vivo and not just in culture assays. In contrast to studies indicating that collapse occurs upon contact with repulsive substrata, collapse of the VD growth cones may result from an intrinsic signal that serves to maintain growth cone primacy and conserve cellular material.


1960 ◽  
Vol s3-101 (53) ◽  
pp. 9-18
Author(s):  
S. H. CHUANG

The gut of Crania anomala has been studied morphologically and histochemically. It is attached to the body-wall by dorsal and ventral mesenteries with the exception of the posterior part of the intestine, which lies free in the right half of the visceral cavity. The gut-wall consists of an inner columnar epithelium, a connective-tissue stroma, and an investing squamous mesothelium. The columnar epithelium comprises ordinary epithelial cells, some goblet cells, and occasional phagocytes. The cytoplasmic inclusions of the gut epithelium include pigment granules, glycogen granules, lipochondria, and goblet-cell globules. The lipochondria contain a phospholipid. The goblet-cell globules contain a muco- or glycoprotein, and are extruded into the lumen of the gut presumably for lubrication and for the entanglement of food particles. Extranuclear DNA, presumably originating from the nucleus, occurs in the cytoplasm of the ordinary epithelial cells in the digestive diverticula.


Parasitology ◽  
1930 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 168-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Keilin ◽  
P. Tate

In previous papers one of us (Keilin, 1915, 1917) has shown that among cyclorrhaphous dipterous larvae there is a remarkable correlation between the anatomical structure of the larvae and their mode of life. Although the mode of life of the larvae is in correlation with such anatomical features as thickness and hardness of the body-wall, the development of sensory organs on the head, and the structure of the alimentary canal, it is in the bucco-pharyngeal armature that the most obvious and important adaptations are to be found. The most important of these adaptations may be mentioned briefly. In certain cyclorrhaphous dipterous larvae the ventral wall of the basal sclerite of the bucco-pharyngeal armature has a number of longitudinal ridges projecting into the lumen of the pharynx. These ridges are usually Y-shaped at their free borders, and form a series of longitudinal channels in the ventral region of the pharynx. In other cyclorrhaphous dipterous larvae such ridges are absent and the ventral wall of the pharynx is smooth. This character allows the larvae to be divided into two groups—“all cyclorrhaphous dipterous larvae parasitic on the most diverse animals or on plants, as well as carnivorous larvae, and larvae which suck the blood of mammals, never have ridges in their pharynx; on the contrary, ridges are always present in saprophagous larvae” (Keilin, 1915). All the larvae which are devoid of ridges and are either parasitic, carnivorous, pass their whole life in the uterus of the female, or are phytophagous, may be united into the group of biontophagous; all larvae which have ridges are saprophagous.


The nerve cord of nereid polychaetes consists of intersegmental ganglia linked by narrower connectives. Each ganglion gives rise to four pairs of peripheral nerves designated in their order of origin IV, I, II and III, but numbered I-IV in their segmental succession. Nerve I arises from the cord immediately behind the intersegmental septum, II (the parapodial nerve) and III leave the posterior end of the ganglion near the middle of the segment and IV originates from the anterior (preseptal) part of the succeeding ganglion at the posterior margin of the segment. Nerves I and IV cross the floor of the body wall transversely and terminate in the dorsal integument, II supplies the parapodium and III links ipsilaterally with homologous nerves of other segments through a lateral nerve which runs longitudinally in the ventral body wall adjacent to the bases of the parapodia. Nerves II are the largest, IV are next in size while I and III are very fine and visible only after staining. All the nerves are mixed and contain relatively few fibres. Each, on the afferent side, supplies a determinable region of the integument, I and IV between them drawing on integumentary receptors over the greater part of the ventral and the whole of the dorsal surface. Nerve II alone receives excitation from the parapodial integument and III is primarily proprioceptive, fibres entering the nerve from the surface of the dorsal and ventral longitudinal muscles. Sensory cells are most numerous in the parapodia, particularly in the cirri, and are present in large number in the ventral body wall. There are very few in the dorsal integument. Almost all are bipolar, usually single but occasionally grouped. Two morphological types of sensory cell are described. The internal (centrifugal) fibres of the sensory cells either run directly into the segmental nerves or, more frequently, discharge excitation into the nerve through tracts of a lattice-like subepithelial plexus made up of fibres of multipolar association cells. Excitation originating in scattered receptors thus appears to be canalized into the few fibres of the main nerves by way of the plexus. The internuncial systems of the cord through which the afferent (and efferent) fibres make their central connexion are of two kinds, (1) giant-fibres and (2) fine-fibres. The paired lateral and paramedial giant-fibres and the single median dorsal giant-fibre have a similar arrangement and distribution in Platynereis dumerilii and Nereis diversicolor to that described by Hamaker (1898) in Neanthes virens . The fine-fibre internuncial neurons are of two types: (1) with short, richly branching axons forming an extensive network in the dorsal neuropile and (2) with long axons, possessed of few collateral processes, forming six longitudinal tracts extending suprasegmentally as dorso-lateral, dorso-medial and ventral tracts disposed symmetrically about the midline. Within the ganglion internuncially transmitted excitation is carried, by virtue of the orientation of the fibres, ventrodorsally within the neuropile. Afferent fibres connect directly with one or other of the six fine-fibre longitudinal tracts. Proprioceptor fibres probably discharge into the dorso-medial region of the ganglion, exteroceptor fibres into its dorso-lateral area. In addition, afferent fibres, of unknown sensory connexion, enter the ventral fine-fibre tracts from nerves II and IV but not from I and III. Incoming afferent fibres, except perhaps in this latter instance where the ventral tract is adjacent to the lateral giant-fibre, appear never to excite giant-fibres directly. The latter are considered to be indirectly excited through the diffuse pathways of the neuropile. Motor axons arise, as do internuncial fibres, from cell bodies in the crescentic cell cortex of the ganglion. Every segmental nerve contains at least one motor axon which crosses the dorsal neuropile of the ganglion from a contralateral cell body, the axon giving off longitudinally alined collateral branches which connect directly with one or more of the dorsal fine-fibre tracts. Synapses between the dorsally crossing motor axons and the giant-fibres have not been observed, though a motor fibre of ventral emergence in nerve IV is synaptically connected with the lateral giant-fibre. The probable significance of these direct and indirect neuron interrelationships is discussed in relation to the responses of nereids and to previously described properties of the giant-fibres. Each segmental nerve contains, at its root, from one to four motor fibres. There is evidence of multiplication of the fibres at the periphery of the nerve, not by branching, but by the interpolation into the motor tracts of relay neurons. In one instance (the parapodial nerve distal to its ganglion) second-order motor neurons contribute additional fibres to the branches. These in turn connect with third-order neurons supplying the muscles. The terminal motor innervation has, however, been seen only in a few places. The peripheral connexions, both on their afferent and efferent sides, thus embody relay neurons, and it is considered that the arrangement may permit of the short-circuiting of excitation and of the possibility of extensive local control of movement. Evidence is presented to show that nerve IV may be mainly concerned with the innervation of the longitudinal muscles of the body wall through the contraction of which locomotory flexures are developed. Nerve II is responsible for the motor innervation of the parapodium. The occurrence of peripheral nervous connexions between the two nerves further suggests that the co-ordination of body flexures and parapodial movements may not be entirely dependent on central nervous linkages.


1981 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 255-275
Author(s):  
W. OTTO FRIESEN

1. Neuronal activity resulting from stimulation by water waves occurs in ventral nerve cord-body wall preparations of the medicinal leech, Hirudo medicinalis. In segmental nerves, this activity consists of afferent compound action potentials with graded amplitudes resulting from simultaneous action potentials in many small sensory axons. Afferent input impinging on one segmental ganglion activates neuronal activity along much of the ventral nerve cord. 2. Previously identified tactile mechanoreceptors are insensitive to low-amplitude wave stimulation. Touch-cell impulse activity can be evoked by moderate or strong wave stimulation, but these impulses appear to arise near the cell body, not from the peripheral receptor endings. 3. The transduction sites for wave stimulation are localized at or very near the segmental sensilla. Because of their location and modality the receptors were named ‘sensillar movement receptors’ (SMR). 4. S cells (Rohde's fibre) receive suprathreshold excitatory input during SMR activation without concomitant activity in the tactile mechanoreceptors. 5. The annulus erector motor neurones contralateral to the afferent SMR inflow are inhibited by SMR activation. This inhibition is also observed in ganglia adjacent to the ganglion receiving the afferent input and provides a neuronal basis for reflexive smoothing of the leech body wall. 6. Two neurones in the anterior median packet of segmental ganglia receive powerful synaptic input during SMR activation. One, cell 202, receives 10 mV excitatory potentials while the other, cell 201, receives 10 mV inhibitory potentials.


1976 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 643-668
Author(s):  
W. B. Kristan ◽  
R. L. Calabrese

1. Repeating bursts of motor neurone impulses have been recorded from the nerves of completely isolated nerve cords of the medicinal leech. The salient features of this burst rhythm are similar to those obtained in the semi-intact preparation during swimming. Hence the basic swimming rhythm is generated by a central oscillator. 2. Quantitative comparisons between the impulse patterns obtained from the isolated nerve cord and those obtained from a semi-intact preparation show that the variation in both dorsal to ventral motor neurone phasing and burst duration with swim cycle period differ in these two preparations. 3. The increase of intersegmental delay with period, which is a prominent feature of swimming behaviour of the intact animal, is not seen in either the semi-intact or isolated cord preparations. 4. In the semi-intact preparation, stretching the body wall or depolarizing an inhibitory motor neurone changes the burst duration of excitatory motor neurones in the same segment. In the isolated nerve cord, these manipulations also change the period of the swim cycle in the entire cord. 5. These comparisons suggest that sensory input stabilizes the centrally generated swimming rhythm, determines the phasing of the bursts of impulses from dorsal and ventral motor neurones, and matches the intersegmental delay to the cycle period so as to maintain a constant body shape at all rates of swimming.


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