scholarly journals The periaxonal space of crayfish giant axons.

1983 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 221-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Shrager ◽  
J C Starkus ◽  
M V Lo ◽  
C Peracchia

The influence of the glial cell layer on effective external ion concentrations has been studied in crayfish giant axons. Excess K ions accumulate in the periaxonal space during outward K+ current flow, but at a rate far below that expected from the total ionic flux and the measured thickness of the space. At the conclusion of outward current flow, the external K+ concentration returns to normal in an exponential fashion, with a time constant of approximately 2 ms. This process is about 25 times faster than is the case in squid axons. K+ repolarization (tail) currents are generally biphasic at potentials below about -40 mV and pass through a maximum before approaching a final asymptotic level. The initial rapid phase may in part reflect depletion of excess K+. After block of inactivation and reversal of the Na+ concentration gradient, we could demonstrate accumulation and washout of excess Na ions in the periaxonal space. Characteristics of these processes appeared similar to those of K+. Crayfish glial cell ultrastructure has been examined both in thin sections and after freeze fracture. Layers of connective tissue and extracellular fluid alternate with thin layers of glial cytoplasm. A membranous tubular lattice, spanning the innermost glial layers, may provide a pathway allowing rapid diffusion of excess ions from the axon surface.

1976 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 419-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Peracchia ◽  
A F Dulhunty

Electrical uncoupling of crayfish septate lateral giant axons is paralleled by structural changes in the gap junctions. The changes are characterized by a tighter aggregation of the intramembrane particles and a decrease in the overall width of the junction and the thickness of the gap. Preliminary measurements indicate also a decrease in particle diameter. The uncoupling is produced by in vitro treatment of crayfish abdominal cords either with a Ca++, Mg++-free solution containing EDTA, followed by return to normal saline (Van Harreveld's solution), or with VAn Harreveld's solution containing dinitrophenol (DNP). The uncoupling is monitored by the intracellular recording of the electrical resistance at a septum between lateral giant axons. The junctions of the same septum are examined in thin sections; those of other ganglia of the same chain used for the electrical measurements are studied by freeze-fracture. In controls, most junctions contain a more or less regular array of particles repeating at a center to center distance of approximately 200 A. The overall width of the junctions is approximately 200 A and the gap thickness is 40-50 A. Vesicles (400-700 A in diameter) are closely apposed to the junctional membranes. In uncoupled axons, most junctions contain a hexagonal array of particles repeating at a center to center distance of 150-155 A. The overall width of the junctions is approximately 180 A and the gap thickness is 20-30 A. These junctions are usually curved and are rarely associated with vesicles. Isolated, PTA-stained junctions, also believed to be uncoupled, display similar structural features. There are reasons to believe that the changes in structure and permeability are triggered by an increase in the intracellular free Ca++ concentration. Most likely, the changes in permeability are caused by conformational changes in some components of the intramembrane particles at the gap junctions.


Author(s):  
Ji-da Dai ◽  
M. Joseph Costello ◽  
Lawrence I. Gilbert

Insect molting and metamorphosis are elicited by a class of polyhydroxylated steroids, ecdysteroids, that originate in the prothoracic glands (PGs). Prothoracicotropic hormone stimulation of steroidogenesis by the PGs at the cellular level involves both calcium and cAMP. Cell-to-cell communication mediated by gap junctions may play a key role in regulating signal transduction by controlling the transmission of small molecules and ions between adjacent cells. This is the first report of gap junctions in the PGs, the evidence obtained by means of SEM, thin sections and freeze-fracture replicas.


1978 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-174
Author(s):  
J.G. Robertson ◽  
M.P. Warburton ◽  
P. Lyttleton ◽  
A.M. Fordyce ◽  
S. Bullivant

Peribacteroid membranes and bacteroid envelope inner membranes have been isolated from developing lupin nodules. Isolation of the peribacteroid membranes was achieved by first preparing membrane-enclosed bacteroids free from other plant organelles or membranes. The peribacteroid membranes were then released by osmotic shock and purified by centrifugation to equilibrium on sucrose gradients. The bacteroids were broken in a pressure cell and the bacteroid envelope inner membranes were isolated using sucrose gradient fractionation of the bacteroid total envelope preparation. The density of the peribacteroid membranes decreased during the period of development of N2-fixation in lupin nodules from 1.148 g/ml for nodules from 12-day plants to 1.137 g/ml for nodules from 18-day plants. The density of the bacteroid envelope inner membranes from nodules from 18-day plants was 1–153 g/ml. The identity and homogeneity of the isolated membranes was established, by comparison with membranes in intact nodules, using phosphotungstic acid and silver staining of thin sections and particle densitites on faces of freeze-fracture replicas of the membranes. Analyses for NADH oxidase and succinate dehydrogenase, spectral analyses and gel-electrophoretic analysis of proteins were also used to characterize the membrane and soluble protein fractions from the nodules. The ratio of lipid to protein was 6.1 for the peribacteroid membranes and 2.5 for the bacteroid envelope inner membranes. Leghaemoglobin was localized in the plant cytoplasm in lupin nodules and not in the peribacteroid space.


1977 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 255-272
Author(s):  
D.S. Smith ◽  
U. Jarlfors ◽  
M.L. Cayer

The distribution of microtubules and mitochondria in central axons of an insect (Periplaneta americana) is assessed by comparison between counts on micrographs and computed axon random ‘models’. These studies show that the observed multiple association of microtubules with individual mitochondria is statistically highly significant. Electron micrographs of thin sections show that linkage is effected by physical cross-bridge, possibly comprising components from the microtubule and mitochondrion. Linear particle arrays are described on the outer mitochondrial membrane in freeze-fracture replicas, and tentatively related to the bridges seen in thin sections. The results are discussed in terms of proposed roles of microtubules in neurons and other cells.


1982 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 245-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.J. Lane ◽  
L.S. Swales

The stages that occur during the assembly of both pleated and smooth septate junctions in developing insect tissues have been examined. The oesophagus and mid-gut of the embryonic moth, and the oesophagus and central nervous system (CNS) of the locust embryo, have been investigated in thin sections and by freeze-fracture during the course of membrane biogenesis. The smooth septate junctions developing between the lateral borders of the mid-gut exhibit, in the early stages, individual intramembranous particles becoming aligned into short ridges. These ultimately migrate over the membrane face and fuse into longer arrays, which become stacked in parallel with other ridges to form the characteristic mature form of the junction just before hatching. Pleated septate junctions occur between the cells both of the oesophagus and of the perineurium, which ensheathes the neurones and the neuroglial cells in the locust CNS; these are also fully formed by the end of embryonic development. The pleated junctions appear to be assembled during the later stages of CNS or gut differentiation, arising first in embryos about two-thirds of the way through development. During their maturation, the initial event seems to be a membrane depression in the P face, which occurs in patches over the presumptive junctional membrane. Into these depressed regions or ‘formation-plaque’ areas, 8–10 nm particles appear to be inserted intramembranously in apparently random arrays. These particles are the most common elements but larger particles are also present; the former ultimately become aligned in a row. With time, other intramembranous particles come to lie in rows parallel to the original one. By hatching, the typical undulating stacks of parallel intramembranous particle rows are fully formed. Gap junctions also form between the same perineurial or oesophageal cells, usually before, but in some cases at the same time, or just after, the septate junctions have been assembled. Tricellular associations between cells also appear around the same time in embryonic development. The simultaneous assembly of these different junctions reflects a high degree of organizational capacity at the membrane level.


1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (6) ◽  
pp. F1004-F1010 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Pappas ◽  
B. M. Koeppen

Whole cell patch-clamp techniques were used to characterize the electrophysiological properties of cells from the inner stripe portion of the rabbit outer medullary collecting duct (OMCDi) grown in primary culture. With pipette and bathing solutions mimicking intracellular and extracellular fluid, the resting membrane voltage was -30 to -40 mV. The whole cell conductance exhibited slight outward rectification, and at the resting membrane voltage the cell conductance averaged 2.58 +/- 0.49 nS (n = 17). The major conductive ion species was Cl-. The Cl- conductance was also found to have a significant permeability to HCO3- and was inhibited by the Cl(-)-channel blockers diphenylamine carboxylic acid and 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid. A small K+ conductance was also present, but no Na+ conductance was detected. Current generated by the H(+)-adenosinetriphosphatase (H(+)-ATPase) was quantitated. This current was dependent on the presence of ATP in the pipette. Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, N-ethylmaleimide, and bafilomycin A1, inhibitors of the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase, also reduced this outward current in an ATP-dependent manner. The inhibitor-sensitive component of the outward current, a measure of the current generated by the H(+)-ATPase, was in the range of 35-100 pA/cell.


1981 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 505-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
D J Meyer ◽  
S B Yancey ◽  
J P Revel

We have compared intercellular communication in the regenerating and normal livers of weanling rats. The electrophysiological studies were conducted at the edge of the liver, and we have found that here as elsewhere in the liver there is a dramatic decrease in the number and size of gap junctions during regeneration. The area of hepatocyte membrane occupied by gap junctions is reduced 100-fold 29-35 h after hepatectomy. By combining observations made with the scanning electron microscope with our freeze fracture data we have estimated the number of "communicating interfaces" (areas of contact between hepatocytes that include at least one gap junction) formed by hepatocytes in normal and regenerating liver. In normal liver a hepatocyte forms gap junctions with every hepatocyte it contacts (approximately 6). In regenerating liver a hepatocyte forms detectable gap junctions with, on average, only one other hepatocyte. Intercellular spread of fluorescent dye and electric current is reduced in regenerating as compared with normal liver. The incidence of electric coupling is reduced from 100% of hepatocyte pairs tested in control liver to 92% in regenerating liver. Analysis of the spatial dependence of electronic potentials indicates a substantial increase in intercellular resistance in regenerating liver. A quantitative comparison of our morphological and physiological data is complicated by tortuous pattern of current flow and by inhomogeneities in the liver during regeneration. Nevertheless we believe that our results are consistent with the hypothesis that gap junctions are aggregates of channels between cell interiors.


1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (12) ◽  
pp. 2837-2842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maurilio J. Soares ◽  
Reginaldo P. Brazil ◽  
Amilcar Tanuri ◽  
Wanderley de Souza

A flagellate trypanosomatid was isolated from the fly Phaenicia cuprina captured in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It grows well in liver infusion – trypticase medium, in the form of choanomastigotes, typical of the genus Crithidia. Morphometrical data obtained at the light microscopical level indicated that the new isolated Crithidia is smaller than Crithidia luciliae, a parasite isolated from Phaenicia sericata. Transmission electron microscopy of thin sections revealed that this trypanosomatid has a flagellar pocket divided into two compartments, one basal and the other apical, separated by a region of attachment of the flagellum to the cell body. The attachment region was characterized in freeze-fracture replicas. The flagellate has a compact kinetoplast DNA network. As in endosymbiote-containing trypanosomatids previously described, no subpellicular microtubules were seen in the regions where the mitochondria touched the plasma membrane, although no endosymbiotes were found in this flagellate. Electrophoretic mobility of six enzymes showed that the parasite could not be grouped in any of the isoenzymic pattern groups of other Crithidia spp. These observations indicate that the trypanosomatid isolated from P. cuprina is a new species of Crithidia. The flagellate is described as Crithidia guilhermei n.sp.


1980 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 438-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Tanaka ◽  
P De Camilli ◽  
J Meldolesi

Three types of membrane interactions were studied in three exocrine systems (the acinar cells of the rat parotid, rat lacrimal gland, and guinea pig pancrease) by freeze- fracture and thin-section electron microscopy: exocytosis, induced in vivo by specific pharmacological stimulations; the mutual apposition of secretory granule membranes in the intact cell; membrane appositions induced in vitro by centrifugation of the isolated granules. In all three glandular cells, the distribution of intramembrane particles (IMP) on the fracture faces of the luminal plasmagranule membrane particles (IMP) on the fracture faces of the lumenal plasmalemma appeared random before stimulation. However, after injection of secretagogues, IMP were rapidly clearly from the areas of granule- plasmalemma apposition in the parotid cells and, especially, in lacrimocytes. In the latter, the cleared areas appeared as large bulges toward the lumen, whereas in the parotid they were less pronounced. Exocytotic openings were usually large and the fracture faces of their rims were covered with IMP. In contrast, in stimulated pancreatic acinar cells, the IMP distribution remained apparently random after stimulation. Exocytoses were established through the formation of narrown necks, and no images which might correspond to early stages of membrane fusion were revealed. Within the cytoplasm of parotid and lacrimal cells (but not in the pancreas), both at rest and after stimulation, secretion granules were often closely apposed by means of flat, circular areas, also devoid of IMP. In thin sections, the images corresponding to IMP-free areas were close granule-granule and granule-plasmalemma appositions, sometimes with focal merging of the membrane outer layers to yield pentalaminar structures. Isolated secretion granules were forced together in vitro by centrifugation. Under these conditions, increasing the centrifugal force from 1,600 to 50,000 g for 10 min resulted in a progressive, statistically significant increase of the frequency of IMP-free flat appositions between parotid granules. In contrast, no such areas were seen between freeze-fractured pancreatic granules, although some focal pentalaminar appositions appeared in section after centrifugation at 50 and 100,000 g for 10 min. On the basis of the observation that, in secretory cells, IMP clearing always develops in deformed membrane areas (bulges, depressions, flat areas), it is suggested that it might result from the forced mechanical apposition of the interacting membranes. This might be a preliminary process not sufficient to initiate fusion. In the pancreas, IMP clearing could occur over surface areas too small to be detected. In stimulated parotid and lacrimal glands they were exceptional. These structures were either attached at the sites of continuity between granule and plasma membranes, or free in the acinar lumen, with a preferential location within exocytotic pockets or in their proximity. Experiments designed to investigate the nature of these blisters and vesicles revealed that they probably arise artifactually during glutaraldehyde fixation. In fact, (a) they were large and numerous in poorly fixed samples but were never observed in thin sections of specimens fixed in one step with glutaraldehyde and OsO(4); and (b) no increase in concentration of phospholipids was observed in the parotid saliva and pancreatic juice after stimulation of protein discharge, as was to be expected if release of membrane material were occurring after exocytosis.


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