Abstract
The terminal processes of single and of pairs of identified photoreceptors in the eyes of the nudibranch mollusc Hermissenda crassicornis were studied by light and transmission electron microscopy after their somata were labelled by intracellular iontophoresis of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The HRP spread from the somata into the axons and fine terminal processes within the neuropil of the cerebropleural ganglia. The photoreceptors ended in extensive secondary branches in the neuropil where previous electrophysiological studies had indicated the probable site of synaptic interactions between photoreceptors. Clear round vesicles (54-126 nm diameter) within labelled processes were similar to the vesicles found in the somata and axon hillocks. The terminal processes of pairs of type B photoreceptors contained different intensities of the HRP label. Uniform intensities of the HRP label were found in the terminal processes of single type B photoreceptors. These differences in intensity suggested that the terminal processes were from different type B photoreceptors. This finding suggests that the connections between type B photoreceptors are probably monosynaptic.
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