Summary
We present ultrastructural evidence for the first known example of a giant nerve net in the phylum Ctenophora. The giant fibre system inBeroë underlies paired strips of adherent epithelial cells that run inside the lips. Interlocking actin-lined cell junctions between opposing adhesive strips keepBeroë's large mouth closed while the ctenophore searches for prey. The giant neurons, up to 6–8 μm in diameter, form a continuous lattice-like plexus rich in vesicles, microtubules, and ‘presynaptic triads’. A novel feature is that individual giant axons make synaptic contacts with more than one type of effector, i.e. longitudinal muscle fibres and epithelial adhesive cells. Contact of prey with sensory receptors on the lips ofBeroë induces rapid disappearance of the actin-lined adhesive cell junctions, and muscular opening of the mouth to ingest prey. Electron microscopy of food-opened mouths shows local thickening of longitudinal muscles and widening of the basal ends of epithelial cells in the adhesive strip, correlated with retraction of the adhesive epithelium into the mesoglea. Addition of 1% Triton X-100 to formaldehyde fixative in the absence of prey also elicits regional thickening of longitudinal muscles at the location of the adhesive strips (visualized by rhodamine-phalloidin staining). The giant neuron system may serve as a final common pathway to rapidly signal disassembly of actin-based junctions between adhesive cells as well as contractions of longitudinal muscles underlying the adhesive strips, thereby enablingBeroë to open its mouth rapidly to engulf prey.
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Tamm, S., Tamm, S.L. A giant nerve net with multi-effector synapses underlying epithelial adhesive strips in the mouth ofBeroë (Ctenophora). J Neurocytol 24, 711–723 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01179820
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01179820