Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 5, 3047-3060, Copyright © 1985 by Society for Neuroscience
The distribution, relationships to other organelles, and calcium- sequestering ability of smooth endoplasmic reticulum in frog olfactory axons
PR Burton and LA Laveri
Ultrastructural studies of single and serial sections of bullfrog olfactory
axons showed that smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) tubules, which usually
appear as single profiles in cross-sections of axons, are continuous over
considerable distances, but that discontinuities do exist.
Computer-assisted three-dimensional reconstruction of portions of axons
indicated that the SER tubules show considerable variation in the volume of
the cisternal space along the tubule, which often follows a tortuous path.
Some branching and anastomosing appears to occur, and electron-dense
material was present in the cisternal space of some tubules. SER tubules
are often bridged to neurofilaments and less often to microtubules. The
usual two to three microtubules in the axoplasm form a domain which is
characterized by a clear area, or zone of exclusion, around the
microtubules. Ultrastructural cytochemistry was used to demonstrate that
SER tubules actively sequester Ca. The electron-dense product (calcium
oxalate) was uniformly and specifically associated with the SER of axons at
both proximal (closest to the perikarya in the olfactory epithelium) and
distal (closest to the olfactory lobe of the brain) ends of the olfactory
nerve. It is concluded that the primary function of SER tubules in these
axons is to serve in the regulation of Ca in the axoplasm, probably to
facilitate fast axoplasmic transport, and that a secondary function may be
the translocation of material in the cisternal space. The observations are
discussed as they may relate to the "microstream" hypothesis of axoplasmic
transport, and it is argued that fast transport occurs through the zone of
exclusion associated with the microtubule domain(s) of axons.