Functional organisation of anterior thoracic stretch receptors in the deep-sea isopod Bathynomus doederleini: Behavioural, morphological and physiological studies
The relationship between segmental mobility and the
organisation of thoracic stretch receptors was examined in
the deep-sea isopod Bathynomus doederleini, which shows
a developed adaptive behaviour during digging. The
movements of segments during digging were analysed
from video recordings, which showed that a large
excursion occurred in the anterior thoracic segments. Dyefills
of axons revealed four types of thoracic stretch
receptor (TSR): an N-cell type (TSR-1), a differentiated Ncell
type (TSR-2), a muscle receptor organ (MRO)-type
with a long, single receptor muscle (TSR-3) and an MROtype
with a short, single receptor muscle (TSR-4 to
TSR-7).
Physiologically, TSR-1 and TSR-2 are tonic-type stretch
receptors. TSR-3 to TSR-7 show two kinds of stretchactivated
responses, a tonic response and a phasico-tonic
response in which responses are maintained as long as the
stretch stimulus is delivered. Both TSR-2, with a long
muscle strand, and TSR-3, with a single, long receptor
muscle, have a wide dynamic range in their stretchactivated
response. In addition, TSR-2 is controlled by an
intersegmental inhibitory reflex from TSR-3. These results
suggest that, although TSR-1 has no receptor muscle and
TSR-2 has a less-differentiated receptor-like muscle, they
are fully functional position detectors of segmental
movements, as are the MRO-type receptors TSR-3 to
TSR-7.</p