EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS IN THE ORGANIZATION OF THE VERTEBRATE CRISTA-AMPULLARIS

Citation
Jm. Goldberg et Am. Brichta, EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS IN THE ORGANIZATION OF THE VERTEBRATE CRISTA-AMPULLARIS, Otolaryngology and head and neck surgery, 119(3), 1998, pp. 165-171
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery,Otorhinolaryngology
ISSN journal
01945998
Volume
119
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
165 - 171
Database
ISI
SICI code
0194-5998(1998)119:3<165:ETITOO>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
Intraaxonal labeling studies in the toadfish, frog, turtle, and chinch illa suggest broad evolutionary trends in the vertebrate crista ampull aris. The crista of anamniotes (fish, amphibians) contains type II hai r cells innervated by bouton afferents and is longitudinally organized . Type I hair cells are first seen in reptiles and birds, where they a re confined to a central zone and are innervated by calyx and dimorphi c afferents, The central zone is surrounded by a peripheral zone conta ining only type II hair cells innervated by bouton afferents, Results in the turtle suggest that the peripheral zone in reptiles and birds i s organized similarly to the entire anamniote crista, The turtle centr al zone finds no parallel in anamniotes but resembles the mammalian ce ntral zone in its structure and afferent physiology. With the advent o f a central zone in reptiles, a concentric organization is superimpose d on a linearly organized peripheral zone. The mammalian crista, in co ntrast, has an entirely concentric organization. This may be related t o the extension of the neuroepithelium further down the slopes of the crista in mammals than in other vertebrates and to the distribution of type I hair cells throughout the mammalian neuroepithelium.