Epithelial Conduction in Salps: II. The Role of Nervous and Non-Nervous Conduction System Interactions in the Control of Locomotion
Open Access
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 80 (1), 241-250
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.80.1.241
Abstract
1. The control of locomotion in Salpa fusiformis was studied by intracellular recordings from motor neurones and swimming muscles. 2. Regular, synaptically driven, volleys of action potentials were recorded from motor neurones. This pattern of activity was consistent with that expected from the waveform of the compound junctional potentials associated with contraction of the swimming muscles. 3. A second class of brain neurone was identified. These cells were synaptically driven. In some, their firing rate was increased while in others it was decreased by activity in an epithelial conduction system, the Outer Skin Pulse (OSP) system. 4. Cells of the outer epithelium were impaled and OSP's were recorded intracellularly as conventional action potentials. The records from many of these cells showed many depolarising synaptic potentials. 5. Numerous gap junctions were observed throughout the outer epithelial layer and several neuroepithelial synapses were found. The distribution of these synapses coincided with that of the epithelial cells from which synaptic events were recorded.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epithelial Conduction in Salps: I. Properties of the Outer Skin Pulse System of the StolonJournal of Experimental Biology, 1979
- LOCOMOTION AND PROPAGATED SKIN IMPULSES IN SALPS (TUNICATA: THALIACEA)The Biological Bulletin, 1977
- The Structure and Innervation of the Locomotor Muscles of Salps (Tunicata: Thaliacea)Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1973
- Embedding in Epoxy Resins for Ultrathin Sectioning in Electron MicroscopyStain Technology, 1960