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Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, Vol s3-105, 1-6, Copyright © 1964 by Company of Biologists
1 Institute for Muscle Disease, Inc., 515 East 71st Street, New York 21, N.Y., U.S.A.
The peripheral nerves of Drosophila are of the tunicated type; their mesaxons are derived from several independent invaginations of the lemnoblast plasma membrane and possess septate desmosomes.
Fine branches of the nerves and tracheoles penetrate deeply into the fibres of the flight muscle and draw the sarcolemma in with them. The myoneural junctions occur on the invaginated portions of the sarcolemma. The axons shed their lemnoblastic elements and become closely apposed to the muscle plasma membranes at the junctions.
The sarcoplasmic reticulum of the flight muscle seems to consist mainly of the extensive infoldings of the sarcolemma and their processes, as in Tenebrio. Dyads formed by the association of isolated vesicles with the membranous infoldings are present in Drosophila. Most of these dyads seem to be in register with the myofibrils, two pairs being associated with each sarcomere.