Cephalopods have one of the most sophisticated cardiovascular systems among the
invertebrates; they have an enclosed high pressure blood system, characterised by a double
circulation, with one main systemic heart and two gill hearts. The cephalopod cardiac
tissues are basically myogenic, but there is evidence for both nervous and hormonal
regulation of most parts of the cardiovascular system, although the details of the control
systems remain unknown. This study investigated the physiology and innervation of the
cardiac tissues of the squid Alloteuthis subulata, Loligo forbesii and L vulgaris.
Histological staining techniques established that the cardiac organs in squid are innervated
from the palliovisceral lobe of the brain via the paired visceral nerves. The nerves to the
ventricle, branch off from each of the visceral nerves, close to a commissure that connects
the two visceral nerves. The auricles of the systemic heart are innervated from a cardiac
ganglion, situated at the base of the gills. Other branches, also given off at this level,
innervate the lateral vena cava, afferent and efferent branchial blood vessels, branchial hearts
and the muscular valve region between the branchial heart and afferent branchial vessel.
Electron microscopical studies have shown the structure and number of fibres in these
nerves.
Pharmacological studies of isolated and perfused squid branchial hearts showed that
acetylcholine had an inhibitory effect on cardiac activity, acting on both nicotinic and
muscarinic receptors. An aminergic receptor system may be present in squid branchial
hearts, although the transmitter substance is still unknown. The catecholamines adrenaline
and noradrenaline excite the heart, although in an inconsistent manner.
Whole cell patch clamp studies revealed that individual squid heart cells operated, using a
combination of at least six different ionic currents; three outward potassium currents
(delayed rectifier, A-current, calcium-activated current) and three inward currents (sodium
current, L- and T -type calcium currents). An understanding of the functions of the various
currents was obtained by recording electrically stimulated and spontaneous action
potentials, using conventional intracellular recording and stimulation techniques. The ionic
currents were isolated by applying known channel antagonists, and each antagonist's effect
on the action potential was studied.
Date of Award | 1997 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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THE INNERVATION AND PHYSIOLOGY OF THE CARDIAC TISSUE IN SQUID
ODBLOM, M. P. (Author). 1997
Student thesis: PhD