Abstract

AbstractFine structure of the carp torus longitudinalis was studied by electron and light microscopy and compared with the granular layer of the carp cerebellum. There are three types of cells in the torus longitudinalis, that is, small, medium‐sized and large cells. From the small cells to the medium‐sized cells, there is gradual transition in size and in the amounts of cell organelles. These cell profiles and the closely packed cell pattern in a part of the torus longitudinalis are quite similar to those in the granular layer of the cerebellum. Moreover, peculiar synaptic configurations of so‐called “synaptic glomeruli” are found both in the torus longitudinalis and in the granular layer of the cerebellum. In the torus longitudinalis, unmyelinated nerve fibers are seen to have bulbous swellings along their course, most of which contain a mitochondrion, as do they in the carp tectum opticum.It is speculated that the torus longitudinalis may be partly related to the granular layer of the cerebellum and partly to the tectum opticum.

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