The stretch receptor neurons of the abdominal muscle receptor organs of crayfish enter the ventral nerve cord and branch to send axons to the brain and to the last abdominal ganglion. They mediate local reflexes in the ganglion of entry and adjacent ganglia but evidence from previous cobalt filling
Central projections of auditory receptor neurons of crickets
β Scribed by Kazuo Imaizumi; Gerald S. Pollack
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 532 KB
- Volume
- 493
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9967
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We describe the central projections of physiologically characterized auditory receptor neurons of crickets as revealed by confocal microscopy. Receptors tuned to ultrasonic frequencies (similar to those produced by echolocating, insectivorous bats), to a mid-range of frequencies, and a subset of those tuned to low, cricket-like frequencies have similar projections, terminating medially within the auditory neuropile. Quantitative analysis shows that despite the general similarity of these projections they are tonotopic, with receptors tuned to lower frequencies terminating more medially. Another subset of cricket-song-tuned receptors projects more laterally and posteriorly than the other types. Double-fills of receptors and identified interneurons show that the three medially projecting receptor types are anatomically well positioned to provide monosynaptic input to interneurons that relay auditory information to the brain and to interneurons that modify this ascending information. The more laterally and posteriorly branching receptor type may not interact directly with this ascending pathway, but is well positioned to provide direct input to an interneuron that carries auditory information to more posterior ganglia. These results suggest that information about cricket song is segregated into functionally different pathways as early as the level of receptor neurons. Ultrasound-tuned and mid-frequency tuned receptors have approximately twice as many varicosities, which are sites of transmitter release, per receptor as either anatomical type of cricket-song-tuned receptor. This may compensate in part for the numerical underrepresentation of these receptor types.
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