Abstract: | The multilamellate glial sheath of mixed nerve roots of the sixth abdominal ganglion of crayfish contains numerous hemi-desmosomes which appear to attach glial lamellae to material in adjacent extracellular clefts. These junctions, which have been described in detail in an earlier report (Shivers and Brightman, '76), are irregular in shape, punctuate and may be as large as 1 mum in diameter. Surgical interruption of sixth ganglion nerve roots results in regeneration of motor axons and their multilamellate glial sheaths. As the glial processes grow and re-establish a highly organized axon sheath, hemi-desmosomes appear. These junctions are present at the advancing edge of glial processes as well as on their lateral margins. Developing hemi-desmosomes are characterized as a diffuse aggregation of 120-130 A intramembrane particles which are present three weeks following nerve section. As growth and reorganization of the sheath proceeds, the intramembrane particles appear to aggregate and form irregular clusters of varying dimensions. Regenerating nerves freeze-cleaved 8 to 16 weeks following surgery exhibit junctional particle aggregates similar to those in normal unoperated nerve roots. Origin of the intramembrane particles which comprise the junctional aggregated in unknown. Perhaps they are synthesized de novo by the regenerating glial cells or, they may be remnants of complexes which became dispersed following surgery. This is the first report of a freeze-fracture study of hemi-desmosome plasticity in an invertebrate nervous system. |