Reflex Control of Abdominal Flexor Muscles in the Crayfish

1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 211-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
DONALD KENNEDY ◽  
KIMIHISA TAKEDA

1. The flexor musculature of the crayfish abdomen is divided into two systems: a set of tonic superficial muscles, and a complex series of massive flexor muscles that produce powerful twitches but never exhibit tonic contractions. The muscle types are histologically differentiated, and also separately innervated: the main flexors receive ten large motor axons, and the slow superficial muscles six smaller ones. 2. Fibres of the main flexor muscles studied are almost all triply innervated; each receives endings from (a) the ‘motor giant’ axon, (b) one of several specific non-giant motor axons, and (c) a common inhibitor. 3. Excitatory junctional potentials (e.j.p.s) due to motor giant and non-giant axons are similar and large; each may trigger secondary, active ‘spikes’, thus often producing post-junctional responses of 100 mV. or more. The responses differ in that the motor giant e.j.p. shows a dramatic decrease upon repetitive stimulation, whereas that due to non-giant motor axons exhibits some facilitation. 4. Activity in the central giant fibres drives both motor axons. The response to both, when the motor giant system is fully rested, is slightly larger than that to either alone; when activated by stimulation of the central giant fibre the junctional potentials are evoked asynchronously due to differences in central reflex time, and double spiking in the muscle fibres sometimes results. Upon repeated stimulation the response to the giant is reduced to a very low level; this is accompanied by a decrease in the tension developed in successive reflexly evoked twitches. The motor giant system thus apparently functions to provide additional tension for the first few ‘flips’ in a series of swimming movements during escape. 5. Impulses in the inhibitor axon, even at the optimal interval, reduce the amplitude of excitatory post-junctional potentials by only a small amount; their effect in shortening duration is more notable. It is postulated that the peripheral inhibitor functions to cut short excitatory depolarizations and hence to terminate lingering tension that might oppose subsequent reflex actions.

1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-246
Author(s):  
DONALD KENNEDY ◽  
KIMIHISA TAKEDA

1. Fibres from the tonic, superficial abdominal flexor muscles in the crayfish receive a complex, highly polyneuronal innervation from among five motor axons and one inhibitor. All efferent nerve fibres show some degree of ‘spontaneous’ activity. 2. The muscle fibres therefore exhibit a constant flux of membrane potential, and hence of tension, in intact preparations. Depolarization is the result of facilitation and/or summation of junctional potentials of various amplitudes, and in some fibres of superimposed electrogenic responses. Neighbouring fibres tend to show similar innervation patterns, more distant ones dissimilar ones. 3. No useful distinction may be made between ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ motor axons. A given axon may produce junctional potentials of very different amplitudes (and some what different rise-times) in neighbouring muscle fibres while another exhibits a precisely reciprocal relationship. The largest axon produces facilitating junctional potentials in all the muscle fibres it innervates, but others may exhibit facilitation in one muscle fibre and antifacilitation in another. 4. Most muscle fibres are innervated by two or three excitatory axons; fibres with single, quadruple or quintuple motor innervation are relatively rare. There is a pronounced tendency for fibres with a rich excitatory innervation to receive the inhibitor as well. The innervation is not shared equally among motor axons: one serves over 90% of the muscle fibres, and two others 20% or less. Statistical analysis of the combinations of motor axons serving muscle fibres reveals that these are apparently random, with all variations from randomness accountable on the grounds of broad regional differences in distribution. 5. The motor axons are selectively activated by specific reflex inputs. Since muscle fibres receive, on the average, only a restricted sample of the available motor supply, it follows that they participate differentially in different reflex actions. Evidence is presented that the firing pattern of motor nerves is appropriate for the temporal properties of their neuromuscular junctions. 6. Reflex inhibition is accomplished by central inhibition of all excitatory motor outflow, accompanied by reciprocal firing in the inhibitor axon. This and the fact that less than half the muscle fibres receive inhibitory innervation demonstrate that, in contrast to the one other crustacean system analysed, reflex inhibition is primarily a central event. Peripheral inhibition in the slow flexor system must serve mainly as a device to achieve repolarization and thus terminate contractions. Such action necessarily depends upon post-synaptic rather than presynaptic mechanisms.


The motor innervation of the segmental musculature of nereid polychaetes appears to be both polyneuronal and multiterminal, which closely resembles the condition found in the Arthropoda. The cell bodies of the motor axons lie in the cord and terminate in endings of the 'en grappe’ type on the surface of the muscle fibres. These observations provide an anatomical basis for the experiments that showed the muscles were capable of fast twitch-like contractions associated with the escape response and slower graded contractions normally seen during the ambulatory cycle of the parapodia. The sensory equipment of the parapodia includes several prominent neurons which function as rapidly adapting stretch receptors. Some of these are activated by the movements of the parapodia and body wall during locomotion and have inputs to the giant fibres and to an unpolarized network of sensory fibres within the cord. These receptors may serve to integrate the activity of individual segments and ensure co-ordinated flexibility of the movements of the worm as a whole.


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.


The giant-fibre responses of Harmothoë and Nereis have been studied with emphasis on the afferent and efferent path ways and the sites of the rapid accommodation of the fast response. When the bundle of sensory neurones of the anal cirrus is stimulated the giant-fibres respond at the first shock. This terminal junction then rapidly accommodates to further afferent excitation. In Harmothoë the muscles which effect the rapid movements of the giant-fibre response are directly innervated by large axons of unipolar cell bodies in the central nervous system. In each segment one neurone of this type supplies both dorsal and ventral longitudinal muscle fibres. By use of a bridge technique this neurone has been isolated. At the first stimulus above a single sharp threshold the resulting nerve muscle preparation gives a maximum electrical response, which is independent of the stimulus strength. A reduced response persists for many repetitions at low frequency. In addition to this fast motor neurone a slower system in the same muscles is indicated by the muscle-action potentials and by observation of the movements. An axon-axon synapse seen histologically between the lateral giant fibres and the large motor neurone to the longitudinal muscle has been identified with the rapidly accommodating physiological junction between these elements. At this level of analysis the afferent and efferent relations of the giant fibres, and in particular the fast motor innervation, are broadly comparable with those of some arthropods.


1938 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 170-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Z. YOUNG

1. Stimulation of single giant nerve fibres in the stellar nerves of the squid (Loligo pealii) shows them to be motor axons which produce contraction of the circular fibres of the mantle muscles. 2. When a stellar nerve is stimulated with condenser discharges a maximal response is obtained at threshold voltage. No increase of response is obtained by further increase in the strength of stimulation except for an occasional slight increase at about ten times threshold voltage probably due to repetitive firing. It therefore appears that the stimulus produces a single impulse in the giant fibre, and that this is capable of exciting contraction in all the muscle fibres which it reaches. This confirms the conclusion reached on histological grounds that in spite of their syncytial nature each of the giant nerve fibres is a single functional unit. 3. Since there are about ten giant fibres on each side the mantle is divided into 20 neuromotor units, each nerve fibre innervating an enormous number of muscle fibres. The existence of these units can also very readily be demonstrated by the fact that threshold electrical stimulation at any point within the territory innervated by each single giant fibre sets up a contraction of the muscle fibres of all parts of the territory with which the stimulated area is in connexion through the nerve. 4. Stimulation of the smaller fibres in a stellar nerve after destruction of the giant fibre also causes contraction of the circular muscles of the mantle. The amount of this contraction increases progressively with increased voltage, presumably on account of the stimulation of more and more nerve fibres. The maximum tension developed in this way is always very much less than that produced by stimulation of the giant fibres. 5. The mantle is therefore provided with a double mechanism of expiratory contraction, maximal contractions being produced by single impulses in the giant fibres and graded contractions by those in the smaller fibres of the nerve. Presumably the former contractions are those involved in rapid movement, the latter in respiration. 6. There are also radial muscles, running through the thickness of the mantle, whose contractions effect the inspiration by making the cavity larger.


1963 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-136
Author(s):  
A. C. NEVILLE

1. The peripheral pathways of the ‘fast’ motor fibres to the locust dorsal longitudinal flight muscles are described at the single unit level, from electrophysiological and histological studies. This is summarized in a diagram on Pl. 1. 2. Both pterothoracic dorsal longitudinal muscles consist of five anatomically distinct motor units, arranged in layers from dorsal to ventral. Each of the four more ventral units of both muscles receives a motor axon from the segment in front via the recurrent nerve, whereas the uppermost motor unit is innervated in each case from the segment containing the muscle. The motor units are nearly equal both in size and capability for work. 3. Each of the five ‘fast’ motor axons innervates one topographically distinct bundle of muscle fibres. There is no overlap between muscle motor units. 4. Even within a single muscle, motor units are capable of vibrating at independent frequencies. This indicates that the coupling of units which occurs during flight is neither structurally nor functionally rigid. 5. With respect to peripheral features, the motor units within each dorsal longitudinal muscle are designed for fast response which improves the synchronization when the relevant neurons fire simultaneously (large motor axons, 15-25 µ in average diameter with high propagation velocity, 8 m./sec. at flight temperature). 6. It is suggested that a tonic motor output, containing at least three units, which was recorded from mesothoracic nerve IBa, travels to the small lateral dorsal muscles.


A study was made of the distal giant synapse, and of proximal synapses, in the stellate ganglion of the squid, Loligo vulgaris . For this purpose we injected iontophoretically dyes or cobalt ions into the pre- or postsynaptic axon. The intra-axonal movement of visible dyes was measured. Both presynaptic fibres, the main second order giant axon and the largest accessory axon, branched to make multiple synaptic contacts on the giant motor axons from near the perikarya down to near the exit of the stellar nerves from the ganglion. There were considerable individual variations in the branching patterns of the presynaptic giant axon and in the course and number of the postsynaptic giant axons. More than one accessory axon made contact with the largest motor axon. Fine structural details of the synapse are presented. The size of the contact area made by the main presynaptic axon on the last postsynaptic axon of a medium-sized animal was estimated from low power electron micrographs. We measured and counted synaptic contacts, synaptic vesicles and mitochondria. The fine structure of proximal synapses was found to be very similar to that of the distal synapse. Cobalt- or dye-injected ganglia showed that the perikarya of the axons which fuse to form the postsynaptic giant axons are located in diffuse and overlapping areas of the giant fibre lobe. In freshly hatched larvae the giant synapse was well differentiated; a gradient of differentiation from brain to periphery was detectable. The distal giant synapses of the oegopsid squid Todarodes sagittatus and of Sepia officinalis differed from the Loligo synapse. In Todarodes and Sepia collaterals and processes from both the presynaptic and the postsynaptic giant fibres are shown to meet in numerous contacts in the enlarged sheath surrounding the third order axon. In several respects the Loligo giant fibre system appears to represent in phylogenetical order the more evolved neuronal network.


1970 ◽  
Vol 102 (9) ◽  
pp. 1163-1168 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Seabrook

AbstractSchistocerca gregaria possess four neurones of giant fibre proportions within the abdominal ventral nerve cord. These fibres arise from single cell bodies in the terminal ganglionic mass and pass without interruption to the metathoracic ganglion. Fibres become reduced in diameter when passing through a ganglion. Branching of the giant fibres occurs in abdominal ganglia 6 and 7.


2015 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Cutroneo ◽  
A. Centofanti ◽  
F. Speciale ◽  
G. Rizzo ◽  
A. Favaloro ◽  
...  

<p>The sarcoglycan complex consists of a group of single-pass transmembrane glycoproteins that are essential to maintain the integrity of muscle membranes. Any mutation in each sarcoglycan gene causes a series of recessive autosomal dystrophin-positive muscular dystrophies. Negative fibres for sarcoglycans have never been found in healthy humans and animals. In this study, we have investigated whether the social ranking has an influence on the expression of sarcoglycans in the skeletal muscles of healthy baboons. Biopsies of masseter and sternocleidomastoid muscles were processed for confocal immunohistochemical detection of sarcoglycans. Our findings showed that baboons from different social rankings exhibited different sarcoglycan expression profiles. While in dominant baboons almost all muscles were stained for sarcoglycans, only 55% of muscle fibres showed a significant staining. This different expression pattern is likely to be due to the living conditions of these primates. Sarcoglycans which play a key role in muscle activity by controlling contractile forces may influence the phenotype of muscle fibres, thus determining an adaptation to functional conditions. We hypothesize that this intraspecies variation reflects an epigenetic modification of the muscular protein network that allows baboons to adapt progressively to a different social status.</p>


In this part of the discussion we shall attempt to describe the way in which electrical signals are propagated along the giant nerve fibres of squids and cuttlefish. These fibres consist of cylinders of protoplasm, 0.2 to 0.6 mm in diameter, and ire bounded by a thin membrane which acts as a barrier to ionic movement. The protoplasm, or axoplasm as it is commonly called, is an aqueous gel which is a reasonably good conductor of electricity. It contains a high concentration of K + and a low concentration of Na + and Cl - , this situation being the reverse of that in the animal’s blood or sea water. Axons which are left in sea water slowly lose potassium and gain sodium. This process takes about 24 hours and is roughly 80 000 times slower than the diffusion of ions out of a cylinder of gelatin of the same size. The interchange of sodium and potassium is very greatly accelerated by stimulating the fibres. Experiments with tracers, such as those made by Keynes & Lewis (1951) or Rothenberg (1950), allow the interchange to be measured quantitatively, and there is general agreement that the impulse is associated with an entry of 3 to 4 µ µ mol of Na + through 1 cm 2 of membrane and an exit of a corresponding quantity of K + . These quantities are very small compared with the total number of ions inside the fibre. In the giant axon of the squid the quantity of potassium lost in each impulse corresponds to only about 1 millionth if the total internal potassium. One would therefore expect that a giant fibre should be able to carry a great many impulses without recharging its batteries by metabolism. On the other hand, a very small fibre such as a dendrite in the central nervous system should be much more dependent on metabolism since the ratio of surface to volume may be nearly 1000 times greater.


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