Merkel cells are contacted by two morphologically distinct types of afferent terminals.
(A–A’) In vivo image of touch dome with (A) and without (A’) Merkel-cell overlay displaying all three contact types. Symbols indicate examples of each ending type: asterisks, uninnervated; hashtags, kylikes; arrowheads, boutons. (B–B’) Confocal image of same touch dome as A, labeled with antibodies against dsRed (TrkCtdTomato, red) with (B) and without (B’) K8 (cyan) overlay. Symbols as in A. (C–D) Single z planes of zoomed in regions from A’, used to measure length and width of individual endings. Areas for each ending indicated below image. (E) Histogram of the maximum ellipse area for each identified terminal, so that each terminal is represented once. Red line: best fit bimodal gaussian. (F) Gaussian components underlying best fit bimodal gaussian in E. Threshold (gray dashed line) defined as the crossing point between the two component gaussians. (G) Ancient Greek kylix. Note the shallow cup and thin stem of the kylix, which closely resembles the previously described Merkel-cell contact. Image from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, reproduced under Creative Commons license CC0 1.0. (H) Survival plot comparing boutons and kylikes. P value: Log-rank test. N=339 kylikes and 120 boutons. (I) Schematic indicating the probability of morphological changes in terminal branches that contact Merkel cells. N=1,120 kylikes, 153 boutons, and 168 empty terminals. The most probable event for each ending type was for the morphology to remain the same (kylikes: 85%, boutons: 39%, empty/removed endings: 87%). (J) Comparison of stable and added Merkel cells with the first known contact of each type. P value: two-tailed Fisher’s exact test. (K) Comparison of the percentage of stable and removed Merkel cells with the last known contact of each type. P value: two-tailed Fisher’s exact test.