Literature DB >> 12619070

Ultrastructural analysis of a putative magnetoreceptor in the beak of homing pigeons.

Gerta Fleissner1, Elke Holtkamp-Rötzler, Marianne Hanzlik, Michael Winklhofer, Günther Fleissner, Nikolai Petersen, Wolfgang Wiltschko.   

Abstract

With the use of different light and electron microscopic methods, we investigated the subcellular organization of afferent trigeminal terminals in the upper beak of the homing pigeon, Columba livia, which are about 5 microm in diameter and contain superparamagnetic magnetite (SPM) crystals. The SPM nanocrystals are assembled in clusters (diameter, approximately 1-2 microm). About 10 to 15 of these clusters occur inside one nerve terminal, arranged along the cell membrane. Each SPM cluster is embedded in a solid fibrous cup, open towards the cell surface, to which the cluster adheres by delicate fiber strands. In addition to the SPM clusters, a second inorganic iron compound has been identified: noncrystalline platelets of iron phosphate (about 500 nm wide and long and maximally 100 nm thick) that occur along a fibrous core of the terminal. The anatomic features suggested that these nerve endings could detect small intensity changes of the geomagnetic field. Such stimuli can induce deformations of the SPM clusters, which could be transduced into primary receptor potentials by mechanosensitive membrane receptor channels. The subepidermal fat cells surrounding the nerve endings prevent the inside from external mechanical stimuli. These structural findings corresponded to conclusions inferred from rock magnetic measurements, theoretical calculations, model experiments, and behavioral data, which also matched previous electrophysiologic recordings from migratory birds. Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12619070     DOI: 10.1002/cne.10579

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Neurol        ISSN: 0021-9967            Impact factor:   3.215


  83 in total

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3.  Clusters of iron-rich cells in the upper beak of pigeons are macrophages not magnetosensitive neurons.

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Review 8.  Magnetic particle-mediated magnetoreception.

Authors:  Jeremy Shaw; Alastair Boyd; Michael House; Robert Woodward; Falko Mathes; Gary Cowin; Martin Saunders; Boris Baer
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Review 10.  Towards the neural basis of magnetoreception: a neuroanatomical approach.

Authors:  Pavel Nemec; Hynek Burda; Helmut H A Oelschläger
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2005-03-18
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