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.1996 Jul;30(3):397-409.
doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4695(199607)30:3<397::AID-NEU8>3.0.CO;2-#.

Fenestration in the myelin sheath of nerve fibers of the shrimp: a novel node of excitation for saltatory conduction

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Fenestration in the myelin sheath of nerve fibers of the shrimp: a novel node of excitation for saltatory conduction

K Hsu et al. J Neurobiol.1996 Jul.

Abstract

Giant nerve fibers of the shrimp family Penaeidae conduct impulses at the velocity highest among all animal species (approximately 210 m/s; highest in mammals = 120 m/s). We examined these giant and other small nerve fibers morphologically using a differential interference contrast microscope as well as an electron microscope, and found a very specialized form of excitable membrane that functions as a node for saltatory conduction of the impulse. This node appeared under the light microscope as a characteristic pattern of concentrically aligned rings in a very small spot of the myelin sheath. The diameter of the innermost ring of the node was about 5 microns, and the distance between these nodes was as long as 12 mm. Via an electron microscope, these nodes were characterized by a complete lack of the myelin sheath, forming a fenestration that has a tight junction with an axonal membrane. Voltage clamp measurements by a sucrose gap technique demonstrated that the axonal membrane at these fenestration nodes is exclusively excitable and that the large submyelinic space is a unique conductive pathway for loop currents for saltatory conduction through such fenestration nodes.

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