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1.
Neurons in the olfactory deutocerebrum of the spiny lobster, Panulirus argus, were recorded intracellularly and filled with biocytin. Recorded neurons arborized in the olfactory lobe (OL), a glomerular neuropil innervated by olfactory and some presumptive mechanosensory antennular afferents. The neurons responded to chemosensory input from the lateral antennular flagellum bearing the olfactory sensilla but not the medial flagellum bearing many non-olfactory chemosensory sensilla. Many neurons received additional mechanosensory input. Thus the OL integrates specifically olfactory with mechanosensory input. OL neurons had multiglomerular arborizations restricted to one or two of the three horizontal layers of the columnar glomeruli. OL local interneurons comprised core neurons with tree-like neurites and terminals in the base of the glomeruli and rim neurons with neurites surrounding the OL and terminals in the cap/subcap. The somata of OL local interneurons lay in the medial soma cluster (100000 somata). OL projection neurons arborized in the base of the glomeruli and ascended via the olfactory glomerular tract to the lateral protocerebrum. A parallel projection pathway is constituted by projection neurons of the accessory lobe, a glomerular neuropil without afferent innervation but intimate links to the OL. The projection neuron somata constituted the lateral soma cluster (200000 somata).Abbreviations AC anterior cluster (cluster 6,7) - AL accessory lobe - aMC anterior subcluster of medial cluster (cluster 9) - A lNv main antenna I (antennular) nerve - A lNM antenna I (antennular) motor nerve - A llNv main antenna II (antennal) nerve - CB central body - CL central layer of accessory lobe - DC deutocerebral commissure - DCN deutocerebral commissure neuropil - dDUMC dorsal subcluster of dorsal unpaired median cluster (cluster 17) - dMC dorsal subcluster of medial cluster (cluster 11) - dVPALC dorsal subcluster of ventral paired anterolateral cluster (cluster 8) G glomerulus - IDUMC lateral subcluster of dorsal unpaired median cluster (cluster 16) - LC lateral cluster (cluster 10) - LF lateral flagellum of antenna I (antennule) - LL lateral layer of accessory lobe - MF medial flagellum of antenna I (antennule) - ML medial layer of accessory lobe - MPN anterior and posterior median protocerebral neuropils - OGT olfactory globular tract - OGTN olfactory globular tract neuropil - OL olfactory lobe - OLALT olfactory lobe-accessory lobe tract - PB protocerebral bridge - pMC posterior subcluster of medial cluster (cluster 9) - PT protocerebral tract - TNv tegumentary nerve - VPMC ventral paired medial cluster (cluster 12) - VUMC ventral unpaired medial cluster (cluster 13) - vVPALC ventral subcluster of ventral paired anterolateral cluster (cluster 8) - ASW artificial sea water - M3 mixture 3 - PRO L-proline - TM TetraMarin extract  相似文献   

2.
The fan-shaped body is the largest substructure of the central complex in Drosophila melanogaster. Two groups of large-field neurons that innervate the fan-shaped body, viz., F1 and F5 neurons, have recently been found to be involved in visual pattern memory for “contour orientation” and “elevation” in a rut-dependent manner. The F5 neurons have been found to be responsible for the parameter “elevation” in a for-dependent manner. We have shown here that the F1 neuron also affects visual memory for “contour orientation” in a for-dependent way. With the help of Gal4/UAS and FLP-out techniques, we have characterized the morphological features of these two groups of neurons at single neuron resolution. We have observed that F1 or F5 neurons are groups of isomorphic individual neurons. Single F1 neurons have three main arborization regions: one in the first layer of the fan-shaped body, one in the ventral body, and another in the inferior medial protocerebrum. Single F5 neurons have two arborization regions: one in the fifth layer of the fan-shaped body and the other in the superior medial protocerebrum. The polarity of the F1 and F5 neurons has been studied with the Syt-GFP marker. Our results indicate the existence of presynaptic sites of both F1 and F5 neurons located in the fan-shaped body and postsynaptic sites outside of the fan-shaped body. This work was supported by the “973 Program” (2005CB522804 and 2009CB918702), the National Natural Sciences Foundation of China (30621004, 30625022, and 30770682), and the Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (KSCX2-YW-R-28).  相似文献   

3.
Summary The nervus corporis cardiaci III (NCC III) of the locust Locust migratoria was investigated with intracellular and extracellular cobalt staining techniques in order to elucidate the morphology of neurons within the suboesophageal ganglion, which send axons into this nerve. Six neurons have many features in common with the dorsal, unpaired, median (DUM) neurons of thoracic and abdominal ganglia. Three other cells have cell bodies contralateral to their axons (contralateral neuron 1–3; CN 1–3). Two of these neurons (CN2 and CN3) appear to degenerate after imaginal ecdysis. CN3 innervates pharyngeal dilator muscles via its anterior axon in the NCC III, and a neck muscle via an additional posterior axon within the intersegmental nerve between the suboesophageal and prothoracic ganglia. A large cell with a ventral posterior cell body is located close to the sagittal plane of the ganglion (ventral, posterior, median neuron; VPMN). Staining of the NCC III towards the periphery reveals that the branching pattern of this nerve is extremely variable. It innervates the retrocerebral glandular complex, the antennal heart and pharyngeal dilator muscles, and has a connection to the frontal ganglion.Abbreviations AH antennal heart - AN antennal nerves - AO aorta - AV antennal vessel - CA corpus allatum - CC corpus cardiacum - CN1, CN2, CN3 contralateral neuron 1–3 - DIT dorsal intermediate tract - DMT dorsal median tract - DUM dorsal, unpaired, median - FC frontal connective - FG frontal ganglion - HG hypocerebral ganglion - LDT lateral dorsal tract - LMN, LSN labral motor and sensory nerves - LN+FC common root of labral nerves and frontal connective - LO lateral ocellus - MDT median dorsal tract - MDVR ventral root of mandibular nerve - MVT median ventral tract - NCA I, II nervus corporis allati I, II - NCC I, II, III nervus corporis cardiaci I, III - NR nervus recurrens - NTD nervus tegumentarius dorsalis - N8 nerve 8 of SOG - OE oesophagus - OEN oesophageal nerve - PH pharynx - SOG suboesophageal ganglion - T tentorium - TVN tritocerebral ventral nerve - VLT ventral lateral tract - VIT ventral intermediate tract - VMT ventral median tract - VPMN ventral, posterior, median neuron - 1–7 peripheral nerves of the SOG - 36, 37, 40–45 pharyngeal dilator muscles  相似文献   

4.
The leech whole-body shortening reflex consists of a rapid contraction of the body elicited by a mechanical stimulus to the anterior of the animal. We used a variety of reduced preparations — semi-intact, body wall, and isolated nerve cord — to begin to elucidate the neural basis of this reflex in the medicinal leech Hirudo medicinalis. The motor pattern of the reflex involved an activation of excitatory motor neurons innervating dorsal and ventral longitudinal muscles (dorsal excitors and ventral excitors respectively), as well as the L cell, a motor neuron innervating both dorsal and ventral longitudinal muscles. The sensory input for the reflex was provided primarily by the T (touch) and P (pressure) types of identified mechanosensory neuron. The S cell network, a set of electrically-coupled interneurons which makes up a fast conducting pathway in the leech nerve cord, was active during shortening and accounted for the shortest-latency excitation of the L cells. Other, parallel, interneuronal pathways contributed to shortening as well. The whole-body shortening reflex was shown to be distinct from the previously described local shortening behavior of the leech in its sensory threshold, motor pattern, and (at least partially) in its interneuronal basis.Abbreviations conn connective - DE dorsal excitor motor neuron - DI dorsal inhibitor motor neuron - DP dorsal posterior nerve - DP:B1 dorsal posterior nerve branch 1 - DP:B2 dorsal posterior nerve branch 2 - MG midbody ganglion - VE ventral excitor motor neuron - VI ventral inhibitor motor neuron  相似文献   

5.
Summary About 60 pairs of ascending interneurons are present in the terminal ganglion of the crayfish Procambarus clarkii (Girard). Some of these interneurons have been impaled intracellularly, characterized physiologically, and then labeled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) to examine the distribution and ultrastructure of synapses. A close relationship between ultrastructure and physiological properties has been found between two types of interneurons, which either have a pre-motor effect upon motor neurons or have no such effect. In one interneuron with a pre-motor effect (6D2), input and output synapses are intermingled on thicker branches, whereas only input synapses are found on small diameter branches. Only input synapses have been observed on the branches in another interneuron with-out a pre-motor effect (6B1). No differences in branch morphology are found in these two interneurons. Interneuron 6D2 contains large numbers of small round agranular vesicles, but the same type of synaptic vesicles is rarely seen in interneuron 6B1, which has no output synapses. Our results indicate a good correlation between the synaptic distribution and pre-motor effects of interneurons in the terminal ganglion.Abbreviations A6, 7 Sixth and seventh abdominal segment of the terminal ganglion - AVC anterior ventral commissure - DC I dorsal commissure I - DIT dorsal intermediate tract - DMT dorsal medial tract - eLG extra lateral giant interneuron - LVT lateral ventral tract - LG lateral giant interneuron - LVT lateral ventral tract - MDT median dorsal tract - MG medial giant interneuron - MoG motor giant neuron - MVT median ventral tract - PVC posterior ventral commissure - R1s sensory fiber tract of nerve root 1 - R3m motor fiber tract of nerve root 3 - R4–7 nerve roots 4–7 - SC I,II sensory commissure I,II - VC I,III ventral commissure I, III - VIT ventral intermediate tract - VLT ventral lateral tract - VMT ventral medial tract  相似文献   

6.
Physiology and morphology of olfactory neurons associated with the protocerebral lobe around the alpha-lobe of the mushroom body were studied in the brain of the honeybee Apis mellifera using intracellular recording and staining techniques. The responses of neurons to behaviorally relevant odorants (a blend, and components of the Nasonov pheromone, and some other non-pheromonal odors) were recorded. Different response patterns were observed within different neurons, and often within the same neuron, in response to different stimuli. All the neurons stained had innervations in the protocerebral lobe. The cell profiles varied from cells connecting the antennal lobe with both the protocerebral and lateral protocerebral lobes (projection neurons), cells linking the pedunculus of the mushroom body with both the protocerebral and lateral protocerebral lobes (PE1 neurons), cells linking the alpha-lobe and protocerebral lobe with the calyces of the mushroom body (feedback neurons), and cells linking the alpha-lobe and protocerebral lobe with the antennal lobe (recurrent neurons), to cells connecting the protocerebral lobe with the contralateral protocerebrum (bilateral neurons). These findings suggest that the protocerebral lobe acts as an olfactory center associating with other centers, and provides multi-layered recurrent networks within the protocerebrum and between the deutocerebrum and the protocerebrum in honeybee olfactory pathways.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Serotonin-immunoreactive neurons in the median protocerebrum and suboesophageal ganglion of the sphinx moth Manduca sexta were individually reconstructed. Serotonin immunoreactivity was detected in 19–20 bilaterally symmetrical pairs of interneurons in the midbrain and 10 pairs in the suboesophageal ganglion. These neurons were also immunoreactive with antisera against DOPA decarboxylase. All major neuropil regions except the protocerebral bridge are innervated by these neurons. In addition, efferent cells are serotonin-immunoreactive in the frontal ganglion (5 neurons) and the suboesophageal ganglion (2 pairs of neurons). The latter cells probably give rise to an extensive network of immunoreactive terminals on the surface of the suboesophageal ganglion and suboesophageal nerves. Most of the serotonin-immunoreactive neurons show a gradient in the intensity of immunoreactive staining, suggesting low levels of serotonin in cell bodies and dendritic arbors and highest concentrations in axonal terminals. Serotonin-immunoreactive cells often occur in pairs with similar morphological features. With one exception, all serotonin-immunoreactive neurons have bilateral projections with at least some arborizations in identical neuropil areas in both hemispheres. The morphology of several neurons suggests that they are part of neuronal feedback circuits. The similarity in the arborization patterns of serotonin-immunoreactive neurons raises the possibility that their outgrowing neurites experienced similar forces during embryonic development. The morphological similarities further suggest that serotonin-immunoreactive interneurons in the midbrain and suboesophageal ganglion share physiological characteristics.Abbreviations CNS central nervous system - DDC DOPA decarboxylase - LAL lateral accessory lobe - SLI serotonin-like immunoreactivity - SOG suboesophageal ganglion - VLP ventro-lateral protocerebrum  相似文献   

8.
Summary In the moth Manduca sexta, the number and morphology of neuronal connections between the antennal lobes and the protocerebrum were examined. Cobalt injections revealed eight morphological types of neurons with somata adjacent to the AL neuropil that project in the inner, middle, and outer antenno-cerebral tracts to the protocerebrum. Neurons innervating the macroglomerular complex and many neurons with fibers in the inner antennocerebral tract have uniglomerular antennal-lobe arborizations. Most neurons in the middle and outer antenno-cerebral tracts, on the other hand, seem to innervate more than one glomerulus. Protocerebral areas receiving direct input from the antennal lobe include the calyces of the mushroom bodies, and circumscribed areas termed olfactory foci in the lateral horn of the protocerebrum and several other regions, especially areas in close proximity to the mushroom bodies. Fibers in the inner antenno-cerebral tract that innervate the male-specific macroglomerular complex have arborizations in the protocerebrum that are distinct from the projections of sexually non-specific neurons. Protocerebral neurons projecting into the antennal lobe are much less numerous than antennal-lobe output cells. Most of these protocerebral fibers enter the antennal lobe in small fiber tracts that are different from those described above. In the protocerebrum, these centrifugal cells arborize in olfactory foci and also in the inferior median protocerebrum and the lateral accessory lobes. The morphological diversity of connections between the antennal lobes and the protocerebrum, described here for the first time on a single-cell level, suggests a much greater physiological complexity of the olfactory system than has been assumed so far.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The distribution of dopamine-like immunoreactive neurons is described for the brain of the bee, Apis mellifera L., following the application of a pre-embedding technique on Vibratome sections. Immunoreactive somata are grouped into seven clusters, mainly situated in the protocerebrum. Immunoreactive interneurons have been detected in the different neuropilar compartments, except for the optic lobe neuropils. Strong immunoreactivity is found in the upper division of the central body, in parts of the stalk and in the -lobe layers of the mushroom bodies. A dense network of many immunoreactive fibres surrounds the mushroom bodies and the central body. It forms a number of interhemispheric commissures/chiasmata, projecting partly into the contralateral mushroom body and central body. The lateral protocerebral neuropil contains some large wide-field-neurons. The antennal-lobe glomeruli receive fine projections of multiglomerular dopamine-like immunoreactive interneurons.  相似文献   

10.
Summary We have used specific antisera against protein-conjugated-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in immunocytochemical preparations to investigate the distribution of putatively GABAergic neurons in the brain and suboesophageal ganglion of the sphinx mothManduca sexta. About 20000 neurons per brain hemisphere exhibit GABA-immunoreactivity. Most of these are optic-lobe interneurons, especially morphologically centrifugal neurons of the lamina and tangential neurons that innervate the medulla or the lobula complex. Many GABA-immunoreactive neurons, among them giant fibers of the lobula plate, project into the median protocerebrum. Among prominent GABA-immunoreactive neurons of the median protocerebrum are about 150 putatively negative-feedback fibers of the mushroom body, innervating both the calyces and lobes, and a group of large, fan-shaped neurons of the lower division of the central body. Several commissures in the supra- and suboesophageal ganglion exhibit GABA-immunoreactivity. In the suboesophageal ganglion, a group of contralaterally descending neurons shows GABA-like immunoreactivity. The frontal ganglion is innervated by immunoreactive processes from the tritocerebrum but does not contain GABA-immunoreactive somata. With few exceptions the brain nerves do not contain GABA-immunoreactive fibers.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The development of GABA-like immunoreactivity was investigated in embryonic and juvenile locusts using an antibody raised against GABA-protein conjugates. GABA-like immunoreactivity was first detectable in the neuropile of embryonic ganglia at 55% development, and in neuronal somata at 62% development. The total number of immunoreactive somata increased between 62% and 85% embryonic development, and followed an anterio-posterior pattern of expression. At 85% development, the number of immunoreactive somata reached adult levels and no change in number was then seen. In embryonic stages and first and second juvenile instars two dorsal and four ventral groups of somata were labeled in all three thoracic ganglia, whilst in later juvenile instars one of the dorsal groups was visible as a separate entity only in the metathoracic ganglion. These early patterns were modified by alterations in the positions of some of the groups during late embryogenesis and during juvenile development to produce the adult pattern. The results show that the development of GABA expression is similar to that of other neurotransmitters. The characteristics of the development of immunoreactivity indicate that some of these immunoreactive clusters may be derived from clonally related neurones. Finally, we demonstrate the presence of immunoreactive somata and processes in embryos, which correspond to those of identified local and intersegmental interneurones studied in the adult.Abbreviations Ab1–3 first-third abdominal ganglion - CON connective - CI 1–3 common inhibitors 1–3 - CTC tract - DC I–VII dorsal commissures I–VII - DIT dorsal intermediate tract - DMT dorsal median tract - LDT lateral dorsal tract - LF lateral fibres - o, iLVT outer and inner lateral ventral tract - MVT median ventral tract - N1–5 nerves 1–5 - aPT anterior perpendicular tract - PT perpendicular tract - aRT anterior ring tract - R1–5 nerve roots 1–5 - PVC posterior ventral commissure - SMC supra-median commissure - T3 metathoracic neuromere - TT T tract - aVAC anterior ventral association centre - VC I ventral commissure I - d,vVCII dorsal and ventral parts of ventral commissure II - VF ventral fibres - VIT ventral intermediate tract - VLT ventral lateral tract - VMT ventral median tract - (d,v)LAG (dorsal and ventral) lateral anterior group - LDG lateral dorsal group - LVG lateral ventral group - MDG medial dorsal group - MPG medial posterior group - MVG medial ventral group  相似文献   

12.
Summary On the basis of 1200 Golgi-impregnated brains the structure of the central complex of Drosophila melanogaster was analyzed at the cellular level. The four substructures of the central complex — the ellipsoid body, the fanshaped body, the noduli, and the protocerebral bridge — are composed of (a) columnar small-field elements linking different substructures or regions in the same substructure and (b) tangential large-field neurons forming strata perpendicular to the columns. At least some small-field neurons belong to isomorphic sets, which follow various regular projection patterns. Assuming that the blebs of a neuron are presynaptic and the spines are postsynaptic, the Golgi preparations indicate that small-field neurons projecting to the ventral bodies (accessory area) are the main output from the central complex and that its main input is through the large-field neurons. These in turn are presumed to receive input in various neuropils of the brain including the ventral bodies. Transmitters can be attributed immunocytochemically to some neuron types. For example, GABA is confined to the R1–R4 neurons of the ellipsoid body, whereas these cells are devoid of choline acetyltransferase-like immunore-activity. It is proposed that the central complex is an elaboration of the interhemispheric commissure serving the fast exchange of data between the two brain hemispheres in the control of behavioral activity.  相似文献   

13.
The Anlage of the Drosophila visual system, called eye field, comprises a domain in the dorso-medial neurectoderm of the embryonic head and is defined by the expression of the early eye gene sine oculis (so). Beside the eye and optic lobe, the eye field gives rise to several neuroblasts that contribute their lineages to the central brain. Since so expression is only very short lived, the later development of these neuroblasts has so far been elusive. Using the P-element replacement technique [Genetics, 151 (1999) 1093] we generated a so-Gal4 line driving the reporter gene LacZ that perdures in the eye field derived cells throughout embryogenesis and into the larval period. This allowed us to reconstruct the morphogenetic movements of the eye field derived lineages, as well as the projection pattern of their neurons. The eye field produces a dorsal (Pc1/2) and a ventral (Pp3) group of three to four neuroblasts each. In addition, the target neurons of the larval eye, the optic lobe pioneers (OLPs) are derived from the eye field. The embryonically born (primary) neurons of the Pp3 lineages spread out at the inner surface of the optic lobe. Together with the OLPs, their axons project to the dorsal neuropile of the protocerebrum. Pp3 neuroblasts reassume expression of so-Gal4 in the larval period and produce secondary neurons whose axonal projection coincides with the pattern formed by the primary Pp3 neurons. Several other small clusters of neurons that originate from outside the eye field, but have axonal connections to the dorsal protocerebrum, also express so and are labeled by so-Gal4 driven LacZ. We discuss the dynamic pattern of the so-positive lineages as a tool to reconstruct the morphogenesis of the larval brain.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution and morphology of crustacean cardioactive peptide-immunoreactive neurons in the brain of the locust Locusta migratoria has been determined. Of more than 500 immunoreactive neurons in total, about 380 are interneurons in the optic lobes. These neurons invade several layers of the medulla and distal parts of the lobula. In addition, a small group of neurons projects into the accessory medulla, the lamina, and to several areas in the median protocerebrum. In the midbrain, 12 groups or individual neurons have been reconstructed. Four groups innervate areas of the superior lateral and ventral lateral protocerebrum and the lateral horn. Two cell groups have bilateral arborizations anterior and posterior to the central body or in the superior median protocerebrum. Ramifications in subunits of the central body and in the lateral and the median accessory lobes arise from four additional cell groups. Two local interneurons innervate the antennal lobe. A tritocerebral cell projects contralaterally into the frontal ganglion and appears to give rise to fibers in the recurrent nerve, and in the hypocerebral and ingluvial ganglia. Varicose fibers in the nervi corporis cardiaci III and the corpora cardiaca, and terminals on pharyngeal dilator muscles arise from two subesophageal neurons. Some of the locust neurons closely resemble immunopositive neurons in a beetle and a moth. Our results suggest that the peptide may be (1) a modulatory substance produced by many brain interneurons, and (2) a neurohormone released from subesophageal neurosecretory cells.  相似文献   

15.
Interneurons with dendritic branches in the antennal lobe of the male turnip moth, Agrotis segetum (Schiff., Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), were investigated with intracellular recording and staining methods. Seventeen projection neurons that transmit information from the antennal lobe to higher centers in the brain displayed dendritic arbors in the male specific macroglomerular complex (MGC) and responded to chemical components of the female sex pheromone used in species-specific sexual communication. Most of the projection neurons responded to several of the pheromone components tested, and a precise correlation between the location of the dendritic arborization and the physiological response could not be demonstrated. One MGC-projection neuron fit the definition of blend specialist. It did not respond to the individual components of the behaviorally active pheromone blend, but showed a strong response to the components when combined in the species-specific blend. Some of the projection neurons also showed clear responses to phenylacetaldehyde, a flower-produced compound and/or to (E)-2-hexenal, a common green-leaf volatile. In eight neurons, the axonal projection could be followed to the calyces of the mushroom body, and subsequently to the inferior lateral protocerebrum.Four local interneurons were characterized both morphologically and physiologically. Each neuron arborized extensively throughout the antennal lobe, and each responded to one or several of the pheromone compounds, and/or to one or both of the plant-produced compounds. One of the local interneurons responded exclusively to the pheromone blend, but not to the individual components.Abbreviations AL antennal lobe - AN antennal nerve - CB cell body - E2H (E)-2-hexenal - IACT inner antennocerebral tract - ILPR inferior lateral protocerebrum - LH lateral horn of the protocerebrum - LN local interneuron - MB mushroom body - MGC macroglomerular complex - OACT outer antennocerebral tract - PAA phenylacetaldehyde - PN projection interneuron - RN receptor neuron - Z5-10:OAc (Z)-5-decenyl acetate - Z5-10:OH (Z)-5-decenol - Z5-12:OAc (Z)-5-dodecenyl acetate - Z7-12:OAc (Z)-7-dodecenyl acetate - Z9-14:OAc (Z)-9-tetradecenyl acetate  相似文献   

16.
Summary In a comparative study, the anatomy of neurons immunoreactive with an antiserum against the crustacean -pigment-dispersing hormone was investigated in the brain of several orthopteroid insects including locusts, crickets, a cockroach, and a phasmid. In all species studied, three groups of neurons with somata in the optic lobes show pigment-dispersing hormone-like immunoreactivity. Additionally, in most species, the tritocerebrum exhibits weak immunoreactive staining originating from ascending fibers, tritocerebral cells, or neurons in the inferior protocerebrum. Two of the three cell groups in the optic lobe have somata at the dorsal and ventral posterior edge of the lamina. These neurons have dense ramifications in the lamina with processes extending into the first optic chiasma and into distal layers of the medulla. Pigment-dispersing hormone-immunoreactive neurons of the third group have somata near the anterior proximal margin of the medulla. These neurons were reconstructed in Schistocerca gregaria, Locusta migratoria, Teleogryllus commodus, Periplaneta americana, and Extatosoma tiaratum. The neurons have wide and divergent arborizations in the medulla, in the lamina, and in several regions of the midbrain, including the superior and inferior lateral protocerebrum and areas between the pedunculi and -lobes of the mushroom bodies. Species-specific differences were found in this third cell group with regard to the number of immunoreactive cells, midbrain arborizations, and contralateral projections, which are especially prominent in the cockroach and virtually absent in crickets. The unusual branching patterns and the special neurochemical phenotype suggest a particular physiological role of these neurons. Their possible function as circadian pacemakers is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The supraesophageal ganglion of the wolf spider Arctosa kwangreungensis is made up of a protocerebral and tritocerebral ganglion, whereas the subesophageal ganglionic mass is composed of a single pair of pedipalpal ganglia, four pairs of appendage ganglia, and a fused mass of abdominal neuromeres. In the supraesophageal ganglion, complex neuropile masses are located in the protocerebrum which include optic ganglia, the mushroom bodies, and the central body. Characteristically, the only nerves arising from the protocerebrum are the optic nerves, and the neuropiles of the principal eyes are the most thick and abundant in this wandering spider. The central body which is recognized as an important association center is isolated at the posterior of the protocerebrum and appears as a complex of highly condensed neurons. These cells give off fine parallel bundles of axons arranged in the mushroom bodies. The subesophageal nerve mass can be divided into two main tracts on the basis of direction of the neuropiles. The dorsal tracts are contributed to from the motor or interneurons of each ganglion, whereas the ventral tracts are from incoming sensory axons.  相似文献   

18.
Summary We have investigated the central connections of the classical olfactory system in the weakly electric fish Gnathonemus petersii using HRP and cobalt labelling techniques. The olfactory bulb projects bilaterally via the medial and lateral olfactory tracts to restricted areas of the telencephalon, namely to its rostromedial, lateral and posterior medial parts. The most extensive telencephalic target is the posterior terminal field, which arcs around the lateral forebrain bundle at levels posterior to the anterior commissure. Projections to the contralateral hemisphere cross in the ventral telencephalon rostral to the anterior commissure and via the posterior dorsal part of the anterior commissure; endings are also present within the anterior commissure. Bilateral projections to the preoptic area, to the nucleus posterior tuberis and to an area in the thalamus are apparent. In all cases, contralateral projections are less extensive than those on the side ipsilateral to the injected bulb. A projection via the medial olfactory tract can be followed to the contralateral bulb. Following injections into the olfactory bulb, retrogradely labelled neurons are found in the contralateral bulb and in six telencephalic areas; they are also present in the periventricular diencephalon and in an area lateral to the nucleus posterior tuberis. The present results support the suggestion that a reduction in olfactory input to the telencephalon occurs together with increased telencephalic differentiation in actinopterygian fishes.  相似文献   

19.
The neuronal connections of the tritocerebral commissures of Periplaneta americana were studied in the brain-suboesophageal ganglion complex and the stomatogastric nervous system by means of heavy metal iontophoresis through cut nerve ends followed by silver intensification. The tritocerebral commissure 1 (Tc1) contains mainly the processes of the subpharyngeal nerve (Spn) whose neurons are located in both tritocerebral lobes and in the frontal ganglion. Some neurons of the frontal ganglion project through the Tc1 to the contralateral tritocerebrum. A few fibers in this commissure were observed projecting to the protocerebrum and the suboesophageal ganglion. There are tritocerebral neurons which pass through the Tc1 or the tritocerebral commissure 2 (Tc2) and extend on into the stomatogastric nervous system. One axon of a descending gaint neuron appears in the Tc2. This neuron lies in the tritocerebrum and connects the brain to the contralateral side of the ventral nerve cord. In addition, sensory fibers of the labral nerve (Ln) traverse both commissures to the opposite tritocerebrum. The anatomical and physiological relevance of the identified neuronal pathways is discussed. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Serotonin-immunoreactivity is mapped in wholemounts and slices of the suboesophageal ganglion (SOG) of larval Manduca sexta by means of immunocytochemistry. An extensive meshwork of serotonin-immunoreactive nerve fibres on some peripheral nerves of the SOG has been demonstrated. This meshwork appears to belong to a serotonergic neurohemal system, probably supplied by two pairs of bilateral serotonin-immunoreactive neurons with big cell bodies on the dorsal side near the midline in the mandibular neuromere. Intracellular recording and staining revealed their physiology and morphology. These neurons produce long lasting (50 msec) action potentials, which suggest that they are neurosecretory cells. Two pairs of bilateral serotonin-immunoreactive interneurons similar to those of other insects are stained in the labial and maxillar neuromeres, but not in the mandibular neuromere. Their ventrolaterally located cell bodies project through a ventral commissure into the contralateral hemiganglion and then cross back again through a dorsal commissure. The axons project into the contralateral circumoesophageal connective.  相似文献   

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