ABSTRACT

Crotaline snakes, which have infrared-sensitive pit organs, provide a good model for linking neuron morphology with sensory modality. In the trigeminal ganglion of the habu, Trimeresurus flavoviridis, cells positive for calcitonin gene-related peptide-like (CGRP) immunoreactivity were found to be of two types, darkly stained and lightly stained. They were pseudo-unipolar, having an axon divided into stem, peripheral branch, and central branch, all of which were 1 µm or less in diameter. Other, CGRP-negative cells in the ganglion were also pseudo-unipolar, but much larger. In configuration, some of the positive cells were similar to the neurons with A-delta fibers, and others to the neurons with C fibers that have been reported by other workers. On the basis of their distribution and density, and physiological studies by other workers, the CGRP-positive cells were judged to be not part of the infrared-receptive system, but to be involved in the transmission of nociception in small fibers.