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ID 32994
FullText URL
Author
Iwasaki, Masazumi
Ohata, Ayako
Okada, Yoshinori
Sekiguchi, Hideo
Niida, Akiyoshi
Abstract

The relationship between segmental mobility and the organisation of thoracic stretch receptors was examined in the deep-sea isopod Bathynomus doederleini, which shows a developed adaptive behaviour during digging. The movements of segments during digging were analysed from video recordings, which showed that a large excursion occurred in the anterior thoracic segments. Dyefills of axons revealed four types of thoracic stretch receptor (TSR): an N-cell type (TSR-1), a differentiated Ncell type (TSR-2), a muscle receptor organ (MRO)-type with a long, single receptor muscle (TSR-3) and an MROtype with a short, single receptor muscle (TSR-4 to TSR-7). Physiologically, TSR-1 and TSR-2 are tonic-type stretch receptors. TSR-3 to TSR-7 show two kinds of stretchactivated responses, a tonic response and a phasico-tonic response in which responses are maintained as long as the stretch stimulus is delivered. Both TSR-2, with a long muscle strand, and TSR-3, with a single, long receptor muscle, have a wide dynamic range in their stretchactivated response. In addition, TSR-2 is controlled by an intersegmental inhibitory reflex from TSR-3. These results suggest that, although TSR-1 has no receptor muscle and TSR-2 has a less-differentiated receptor-like muscle, they are fully functional position detectors of segmental movements, as are the MRO-type receptors TSR-3 to TSR-7.

Keywords
stretch receptor
muscle receptor organ
N-cell
accessory neurone
crayfish
Crustacea
isopod
Bathynomus
doederleini.
Note
Published with permission from the copyright holder. This is the institute's copy, as published in The Journal of Experimental Biology, 15 October 2001, Volume 204, Issue 20, Pages 3411-3423.
Publisher URL:http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/reprint/204/20/3411
Copyright © 2001 The Company of Biologists Limited. All rights reserved.
Published Date
2001-10
Publication Title
The Journal of Experimental Biology
Volume
volume204
Issue
issue20
Start Page
3411
End Page
3423
Content Type
Journal Article
language
English
Refereed
True
Submission Path
biology_general/16