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The Journal of Neuroscience logoLink to The Journal of Neuroscience
. 1988 Apr 1;8(4):1254–1263. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.08-04-01254.1988

The central projections of the stretch receptor neurons of crayfish: structure, variation, and postembryonic growth

MJ Bastiani 1, B Mulloney 1
PMCID: PMC6569273  PMID: 3357018

Abstract

Each stretch receptor neuron (SR) of the crayfish abdomen projects from its peripherally located soma an axon that enters the CNS through the second nerve (N2) of its segmental ganglion. Co2+ backfills of N2 revealed that this axon bifurcates, sending one branch to the brain and the other to the terminal abdominal ganglion. Each axon makes many short lateral branches as it traverses each of the other segmental ganglia, and has 2 major arborizations--one in the tritocerebrum of the brain and the other in the terminal abdominal ganglion, G6. These projections to G6 are described in detail. Individual SR axons from different segments were impaled in G6 with a Lucifer yellow-filled microelectrode, identified physiologically, and then filled to discover their structures. In a sample of more than 50 SR neurons, no systematic structural differences between the projections of phasic SR neurons and tonic SR neurons were observed. Three kinds of structural variability occurred in these projections to G6: unusual primary axon shape, long primary axon, and large terminal varicosities. Comparisons of SR neurons that originated in different segments revealed a segmental gradient in the probability of each structural variant. SR neurons from more anterior segments were more likely to show these structural variations. Comparisons of these variations in crayfish of different sizes showed that unusual primary axon shape and long primary axons were more probable in large crayfish than in small ones. Therefore, these variations are probably the products of postembryonic growth of the nervous system.


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