Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 1, 606-619, Copyright © 1981 by Society for Neuroscience
The giant serotonergic neuron of Aplysia: a multi-targeted nerve cell
JH Schwartz and LJ Shkolnik
We have examined the various classes of cells that can be innervated by the
giant cerebral neuron (GCN), an identified serotonergic cell that functions
in arousal and maintenance of feeding behavior. We have found that this
single neuron innervates a remarkable variety of postsynaptic targets by
means of varicosities bearing active zones. The neuron's presynaptic
terminals were identified by electron microscopic radioautography after
intrasomatic injection of a tritiated amino sugar precursor of membrane
glycoproteins; these are moved to nerve endings by fast axonal transport.
In addition to endings on buccal muscle, we have found that GCN forms
appositions with the morphological characteristics of synapses on axonal
processes and cell bodies of neurons in the buccal ganglion and,
unexpectedly, it forms appositions most often with glial cells which form
the lining of intraganglionic hemal sinuses. Thus, GCN, through contacts on
a variety of postsynaptic targets, has the potential of mediating several
different functions, each of which is usually associated with a specific
specialized type of neuron. In random electron micrographs, approximately
14% of GCN's varicosities had membrane specializations presumed to be the
sites where transmitter is released. In these sections, GCN's active zones
were quite small, 0.25 micrometer or approximately five vesicle diameters
long. One of GCN's terminals was reconstructed completely from a series of
thin sections. It had a single, flat ovoid active zone with an area of 17
micrometers2. We suggest that active zones often are overlooked in random
sections of monoaminergic terminals because they are small.