Abstract

The glial cells surrounding the identified giant nerve cell bodies R2 or LP1 of Aplysia punctata were studied by quantitative electron microscopy. They contain specific, electron-dense but non-osmiophilic membrane-bound granules, approximately 0.3 microns in diameter, called gliagrana. Similar glial granules are more often found in marine than in freshwater molluscs, possibly because they represent a calcium store used to compensate excess Na+ in the extracellular milieu of marine species and to regulate perineuronal calcium concentration. In agreement with this hypothesis, the abundance of gliagrana (= number of glial granules per microns 2) is found to be higher in animals adapted to low Ca2+ artificial sea water than in animals kept in high Ca2+ (or low Na+) conditions. This finding is not observed after 1 week but after 2 weeks of adaptation.

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