Abstract

Gas flow analysis, autoradiography, and electron microscopy were performed on radial nerve cords of sea stars injected intragastrically with [14C] leucine tracer, a precursor of axonal proteins. Neurotubules, neurofilaments, and axonal transport were demonstrated for the first time in sea stars. This transport occurred at two rates (fast phase: 240–480 mm/da, slow phase: 20–40 mm/da) moving in both the cellulifugal and centripetal directions. The rate in the centripetal direction was slightly slower. Displacement of peaks of radioactivity appeared cyclic.Transneuronal transport apparently occurred between several groups of neurones suggesting the possibility of metabolic communication, perhaps across the synapse, between groups of neurones or even areas of the nervous system. Regenerating nerve cords demonstrated an increase in the rate (400–600 mm/da) and quantity (6–11 times as much) of label transported to cord termini.

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