Abstract
Sites of release of neurosecretory material were examined in a neurohemal organ of decapod crustaceans, the sinus gland of the land crab, Gecarcinus lateralis. Such discharge into the circulation seems to occur primarily at interfaces between the neurosecretory axons and the acellular stromal sheath which is interposed between parenchyma and hemolymph. The evidence obtained from electron micrographs of adult specimens indicates that more or less intact secretory granules are released into the extraaxonal space primarily by the process of exocytosis. Synaptic-type vesicles are clustered in parts of neurosecretory axons facing the stromal sheath. Such vesicles are thought to result from rearrangement of membranes temporarily fused at the release site and to a minor degree from fragmentation of neurosecretory vesicles within the axon. The presence of nonmarginal vesicles and the occasional appearance of “free” intraaxonal dense material are interpreted as indications of a second, probably less frequent, mode of release of neurosecretory material.
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More From: Zeitschrift fur Zellforschung und mikroskopische Anatomie (Vienna, Austria : 1948)
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