1980
DOI: 10.1007/bf00234868
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Microtubules, dendritic spines and spine apparatuses

Abstract: Using techniques for enhanced microtubular preservation, including albumin pretreatment (Gray, 1975), occipital cortex of rats was studied electron microscopically at various ages of development. A close structural relationship was seen between microtubules, sacs of SER and the postsynaptic "thickening" in primordial spines and with the dense "plate" material of spine apparatuses. Stereoscopic preparations in addition show a more complicated substructure than previously described for the "plate". Microtubules … Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…4 A, B), which is a membranous organelle that connects the synapse to the smooth endoplasmic reticulum in the dendrite (Westrum et al, 1980;Spacek, 1985; A, Electron micrographs of polyribosomes (arrows) in a dendritic shaft (A1) and in a dendritic spine base (A2), neck (A3), and head (A4 ). Arrowheads indicate synapses on the spines in A3 and A4.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4 A, B), which is a membranous organelle that connects the synapse to the smooth endoplasmic reticulum in the dendrite (Westrum et al, 1980;Spacek, 1985; A, Electron micrographs of polyribosomes (arrows) in a dendritic shaft (A1) and in a dendritic spine base (A2), neck (A3), and head (A4 ). Arrowheads indicate synapses on the spines in A3 and A4.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perforated PSDs are thought to be a site of synaptic plasticity, as their number increases during axonal regeneration and LTP and they are required for learning in aged rats (Nieto-Sampedro et al, 1982;Desmond and Levy, 1986Geinisman et al, 1986). The sacs of SER in the spine apparatus are thought to sequester calcium Fitkova et al, 1983;Andrews et al, 1988;Mignery et al, 1989), and the densestaining material between the sacs of a mature spine apparatus is thought to be of microtubular origin and possibly to serve both structural and protein synthetic roles (Westrum et al, 1980;Spacek, 1985a,b). These interpretations suggest that the parallel maturation of the spine apparatus with the occurrence of the perforated PSDs could signal an enhanced regulation of ionic fluxes and protein synthesis in the large adult mushroom spines.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The spine apparatus, which we visualize to play a role in the division of synapses, is an aggregation of cisternae within the dendritic spine, with electron opaque material appearing between adjacent cisternae (2,22,43,44). Indeed, Tarrant and Routtenberg (20) have shown the presence of filamentous connections and membranous extensions between the spine apparatus, the synaptic spinule, and the PSD, leading them to propose that all of these structures are intimately related to one another.…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%