Abstract

The spiny collaterals of the Mauthner axon were reinvestigated in the tench (Tinca tinca L.) with the electron microscope and special staining procedures. These collaterals, as demonstrated by intraaxonal labelling with lucifer yellow, are more or less regularly spaced (100-300 micrometers) and make synaptic contacts with processes of spinal motoneurons and interneurons. The unmyelinated tips of the collaterals are further characterized by the following structural features: (1) an electron-dense undercoating of the axolemma, (2) a positive Prussian blue reaction of the inner surface of the axolemma following ferric ion-ferrocyanide staining (Waxman and Quick, '78a), (3) expanded extracellular spaces which react specifically to inorganic phosphate, metallic ions, and diaminobenzidine. All these properties are known to be shared by the axolemma of central and peripheral nodes of Ranvier. Previous studies from this laboratory have shown that the nerve impulse is propagated along the Mauthner axon in a saltatory mode. Since classical nodal gaps could not be identified within the myelin sheath of this giant fiber, it is concluded on the basis of the present findings that the unmyelinated tips of the spiny collaterals represent nodal equivalents, and thus provide the morphological substrate for the saltatory propagation of the nerve impulse along the Mauthner axon. The typical latency steps, as demonstrated in the latency plot of the longitudinal current signals (Greeff and Yasargil, '80), and the distances between the identified membrane specializations at the axon collaterals are consistent with this conclusion.

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