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. 1986 Jul-Aug;102(1-2):75-86.
doi: 10.3109/00016488609108649.

Innervation patterns in rat saccular macula. A structural basis for complex sensory processing

Innervation patterns in rat saccular macula. A structural basis for complex sensory processing

M D Ross et al. Acta Otolaryngol. 1986 Jul-Aug.

Abstract

Serial sections through the anterior part of rat saccular macula were reconstructed as montages. Findings are that type II hair cells are integrated into the neural circuitry of type I cells, chiefly by synapses with neighboring calyces and their collaterals; and that complex interactions between afferent- and efferent-type nerve elements take place. Three basic types of nerve/calyx pattern are present: U-type nerves lose their myelin before they enter the macula and have complex calyces with several collaterals; M-type nerves are myelinated up to the calyx, which lacks collaterals; and M/U-type nerves have short, unmyelinated segments proximal to their calyces, which have few collaterals. Both afferent- and efferent-type collaterals spring from calyces, chiefly from those of U-type nerves. Type II cells are presynaptic both to electron-lucent and to vesiculated terminals; some synapses are reciprocal. Electron-lucent boutons sometimes are presynaptic to calyces and to type II hair cells; and morphologically afferent-to-afferent kinds of synapses occur in the neuroepithelium. The anatomical findings indicate that complex information processing must occur in mammalian gravity receptors.

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