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1.
Manduca sexta molts several times as a larva (caterpillar) before becoming a pupa and then an adult moth. Each molt culminates in ecdysis behavior, during which the old cuticle is shed. Prior to each larval ecdysis, the old cuticle is loosened by pre-ecdysis behavior, which includes rhythmic, synchronous compressions of the abdomen. A previous study indicated that motor neuron activity during pre-ecdysis compression behavior is driven by an ascending neural pathway from the terminal abdominal ganglion. The present study describes a pair of interneurons, designated IN-402, that are located in the terminal ganglion and belong to the ascending pathway. Each IN-402 is synchronously active with pre-ecdysis compression motor bursts, and bilaterally excites compression motor neurons throughout the abdominal nerve cord via apparently monosynaptic connections. The pair of IN-402s appears to be the sole source of rhythmic synaptic drive to the motor neurons during the pre-ecdysis compression motor pattern. These interneurons play a key role in the production of larval pre-ecdysis behavior, and are candidates for contributing to the developmental weakening of pre-ecdysis behavior at pupation.Abbreviations A3, A4... abdominal ganglion 3, abdominal ganglion 4... - AT terminal abdominal ganglion - DN A anterior branch of the dorsal nerve - EH eclosion hormone - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential  相似文献   

2.
Summary At the culmination of each molt, the larval tobacco hornworm exhibits a pre-ecdysis behavior prior to shedding its old cuticle at ecdysis. Both pre-ecdysis and ecdysis behaviors are triggered by the peptide, eclosion hormone (EH). Pre-ecdysis behavior consists of rhythmic abdominal compressions that loosen the old larval cuticle. This behavior is robust at larval molts, but at the larval-pupal molt the only comparable behavior consists of rhythmic dorso-ventral flexions of the anterior body. These flexions appear to be an attenuated version of the larval pre-ecdysis behavior because (1) they show the same EH dependence, and (2) the motor patterns recorded from EH treated, deafferented larval and pupal preparations are similar except that the pupal pattern is much weaker. Both patterns are characterized by rhythmic, synaptically-driven bursts of action potentials in motoneurons MN-2 and MN-3, which occur synchronously in all segments. However, the synaptic drive to the motoneurons and their resultant levels of activity are reduced during the pupal pre-ecdysis motor pattern, especially in posterior abdominal segments. Although the dendritic arbors of both motoneurons regress somewhat during the larval-pupal transformation, this does not appear to be the primary source of diminished synaptic drive because regression is greatest in the segments in which synaptic inputs remain the strongest. The developmental weakening of the pre-ecdysis motor pattern thus may be due to changes at the interneuronal level.Abbreviations A2, A3... abdominal segments 2, 3, etc. - ALE anterior lateral external muscle - day L3 third day of the 5th larval instar - day P0 the day of pupal ecdysis - DN a anterior branch of the dorsal nerve - EH eclosion hormone - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - TP tergopleural muscle  相似文献   

3.
Each molt in the hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, culminates in the shedding of the old cuticle at ecdysis. Prior to each larval ecdysis, the old cuticle is loosened by pre-ecdysis behavior, which includes rhythmic, synchronous compressions in all abdominal segments. Prior to ecdysis to the pupal stage, pre-ecdysis behavior and its underlying motor pattern are markedly attenuated. A single pair of interneurons located in the terminal abdominal ganglion, the IN-402s, drives compression motoneuron activity during the pre-ecdysis motor pattern via monosynaptic excitatory connections. The present study tested the hypotheses that (1) changes in intrinsic properties (resting membrane potential, spike threshold, input resistance and excitability) of compression motoneurons, or (2) changes in the strength of synaptic connections from IN-402s to compression motoneurons, underlie the developmental attenuation of the pre-ecdysis motor pattern. Membrane potential was slightly more hyperpolarized in prepupal as compared to larval motoneurons, but no other findings supported the tested hypotheses. These results suggest that developmental weakening of the pre-ecdysis motor pattern results from changes upstream of the compression motoneurons and their synaptic connections from IN-402s. Accepted: 29 September 1999  相似文献   

4.
Each larval moult in Manduca sexta consists of an identical series of developmental and behavioural events leading up to ecdysis. Injections of eclosion hormone into staged larvae in any instar resulted in the premature elicitation of the larval pre-ecdysis behaviour, comprising a rhythmic sequence of muscle contractions, followed by the larval ecdysis behaviour.A marked depletion of eclosion hormone stores form the ventral chain of ganglia coincided with each larval ecdysis and in the moult to the fifth instar, eclosion hormone activity appeared in the blood at the onset of the pre-ecdysis behaviour.Responsiveness to eclosion hormone for pre-ecdysis and ecdysis behaviour developed about 12 and 6 hr before normal ecdysis, respectively. Elicitation of ecdysis behaviour by exogenous hormone inhibited both subsequent behavioural responses to eclosion hormone and endogenous hormonal release.In conclusion, the behavioural programme involved in each larval ecdysis appears to be controlled by the eclosion hormone.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The hawkmoth,Manduca sexta, under-goes periodic molts during its growth and metamorphosis. At the end of each molt, the old cuticle is shed by means of a hormonally-activated ecdysis behavior. The pharate adult, however, must not only shed its old cuticle but also dig itself out from its underground pupation chamber. To accomplish this, the adult performs a series of abdominal retractions and extensions; the extensions are coupled with movements of the wing bases. This ecdysis motor pattern is distinct from the slowly progressing, anteriorly-directed, abdominal peristalses expressed by ecdysing larvae and pupae.We have found that the ability to produce the larval-like ecdysis pattern is retained in the adult. Although this behavior is not normally expressed by the adult, larval-like ecdysis could be unmasked when descending neuronal inputs, originating in the pterothoracic ganglion, were removed from the unfused abdominal ganglia. Transformation of the adult-specific ecdysis pattern to the larval-like pattern was accomplished by transecting the connectives between the pterothorax and the abdomen, or by reversibly blocking neuronal activity with a cold-block. A comparative analysis of the ecdysis motor patterns expressed by larvae and by isolated adult abdomens indicates that the two motor patterns are indistinguishable, suggesting that the larval ecdysis motor pattern is retained through metamorphosis. We speculate that its underlying neural circuitry is conserved through development and later modulated to produce the novel ecdysis pattern expressed in the adult stage.Abbreviations A(n) nth abdominal segment - DL dorsal longitudinal - EH eclosion hormone - ISMs intersegmental muscles - MN motoneuron - SEG subesophageal ganglion - T1,T2,T3 prothoracic, mesothoracic, and metathoracic ganglion - TSMs tergosternal muscles - TX thorax  相似文献   

6.
Wells C  Aparicio K  Salmon A  Zadel A  Fuse M 《Peptides》2006,27(4):698-709
In insects, ecdysis or shedding of the old cuticle, consists of a series of behaviors that are regulated by the coordinated actions of a number of neuropeptides, one of which is ecdysis triggering hormone (ETH). ETH acts directly on central pattern generators of the abdominal ganglia to trigger onset of pre-ecdysis behaviors, as well as indirectly to activate release of eclosion hormone, thereby inducing onset of ecdysis behaviors through a cGMP-mediated mechanism. We assessed the minimal C-terminal amino acids required for biological activity of ETH, by assessing: (i) onset of pre-ecdysis and ecdysis behaviors in vivo, after injection of peptide analogs, (ii) onset of fictive pre-ecdysis and ecdysis motor patterns in vitro, as recorded extracellularly, after incubation of the CNS with the peptide analogs, and (iii) accumulation of cGMP within cells of the abdominal ganglia, as assessed immunohistochemically. Amidation of ETH at the C-terminus was required to elicit a biological response in vivo and in vitro, as well as an accumulation of cGMP within the CNS. The five amino acid amidated C-terminus of ETH (NIPRMamide) was the minimal moiety able to induce a robust pre-ecdysis response in vivo and in vitro, while a seven amino acid core (NKNIPRMa) was required for induction of ecdysis, including accumulation of cGMP immunoreactivity within the CNS. Analogs smaller than 12 amino acids in length were only active at very high concentrations in vivo, suggesting that smaller fragments might be susceptible to hemolymph degradation. Some alanine substitutions or removal of internal amino acids altered the activity of ETH, as well as the time of onset of ecdysis behaviors, suggesting that internal amino acids play a role in maintaining proper folding of the peptide for successful binding or activity at the ETH receptor.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
10.
Eclosion hormone (EH) is a 7000 Da peptide that triggers ecdysis behavior in insects. In the moth, Manduca sexta, EH is found in two pairs of ventromedial (VM) cells in the brain which send their axons down the ventral nerve cord to a neurohemal site in the proctodeal nerve in the larva and pupa. During adult development, these cells send axon collaterals to the corpora cardiaca where they form a new release site used for adult eclosion. Studies of bioassayable peptide during the 5th larval instar and the larval-pupal transformation revealed that after depletion at ecdysis, the VM cells showed a transient increase in EH found in their cell bodies and axons. By contrast, their terminals in the proctodeal nerve showed a gradual accumulation of peptide followed by a release of over 90% of the stored material at pupal ecdysis. In situ hybridization analysis on whole mounts of the brains showed that the VM cells always contained EH mRNA with increased accumulation during the larval and pupal molting periods with a slight decline just before ecdysis. High levels of EH mRNA were found in brains of diapausing pupae. During the first two-thirds of adult development, mRNA accumulated to high levels, then slowly declined until ecdysis. EH mRNA levels up to 3 days after adult eclosion. At no time was EH mRNA found in the lateral neurosecretory cell cluster previously reported to produce EH for adult eclosion. 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Insect growth and metamorphosis is punctuated by molts, during which a new cuticle is produced. Every molt culminates in ecdysis, the shedding of the remains of the old cuticle. Both the timing of ecdysis relative to the molt and the actual execution of this vital insect behavior are under peptidergic neuronal control. Based on studies in the moth, Manduca sexta, it has been postulated that the neuropeptide Crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP) plays a key role in the initiation of the ecdysis motor program. We have used Drosophila bearing targeted ablations of CCAP neurons (CCAP KO animals) to investigate the role of CCAP in the execution and circadian regulation of ecdysis. CCAP KO animals showed specific defects at ecdysis, yet the severity and nature of the defects varied at different developmental stages. The majority of CCAP KO animals died at the pupal stage from the failure of pupal ecdysis, whereas larval ecdysis and adult eclosion behaviors showed only subtle defects. Interestingly, the most severe failure seen at eclosion appeared to be in a function required for abdominal inflation, which could be cardioactive in nature. Although CCAP KO populations exhibited circadian eclosion rhythms, the daily distribution of eclosion events (i.e., gating) was abnormal. Effects on the execution of ecdysis and its circadian regulation indicate that CCAP is a key regulator of the behavior. Nevertheless, an unexpected finding of this work is that the primary functions of CCAP as well as its importance in the control of ecdysis behaviors may change during the postembryonic development of Drosophila.  相似文献   

12.
SYNOPSIS. The end of the molting process in the tobacco hornwormincludes the rapid digestion of the old cuticle, molting fluidresorption, ecdysis of the old cuticle, and expansion and hardeningof the new cuticle. The coordination of these processes is accomplishedby three hormones. Each ecdysis during the life of Manduca appearsto be triggered by eclosion hormone. Depending on developmentalstage, the hormone comes either from the brain-corpora cardiacacomplex or from the chain of ventral ganglia. The neural programstriggered by eclosion hormone include a neuroendocrine event,the release of the tanning hormone, bursicon, thereby ensuringthat tanning of the new cuticle must follow ecdysis. Ecdysis,itself, appears to be controlled by the ecdysteroid levels sinceecdysteroid injections delay ecdysis at physiological concentrationsand in a dose dependent fashion. This delay is due to inhibitionof eclosion hormone secretion and to the retardation of theterminal phases of the molt including the digestion of the oldcuticle and the onset of sensitivity to eclosion hormone. Thus,eclosion hormone secretion and the ecdysis it triggers are coordinatedwith the end of development because both are influenced by thesame endocrine signal—the decline in the ecdysteroid titer.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Crustacean cardioactive peptide-immunoreactive neurons occur in the entire central nervous system of Locusta migratoria. The present paper focuses on mapping studies in the ventral nerve cord and on peripheral projection sites. Two types of contralaterally projecting neurons occur in all neuromers from the subesophageal to the seventh abdominal ganglia. One type forms terminals at the surface of the thoracic nerves 6 and 1, the distal perisympathetic organs, the lateral heart nerves, and on ventral and dorsal diaphragm muscles. Two large neurons in the anterior part and several neurons of a different type in the posterior part of the terminal ganglion project into the last tergal nerves. In the abdominal neuromers 1–7, two types of ipsilaterally projecting neurons occur, one of which gives rise to neurosecretory terminals in the distal perisympathetic organs, in peripheral areas of the transverse, stigmata and lateral heart nerves. Four subesophageal neurons have putative terminals in the neurilemma of the nervus corporis allati II, and in the corpora allata and cardiaca. In addition, several immunoreactive putative interneurons and other neurons were mapped in the ventral nerve cord. A new in situ whole-mount technique was essential for elucidation of the peripheral pathways and targets of the identified neurons, which suggest a role of the peptide in the control of heartbeat, abdominal ventilatory and visceral muscle activity.Abbreviations AG abdominal ganglia - AM alary muscle - AMN alary muscle nerve - CA corpus allatum - CC corpus cardiacum - dPSO distal perisympathetic organ - LHN lateral heart nerve - LT CCAP-immunoreactive lateral tract - NCA nervus corporis allati - NCC nervus corporis cardiaci - NM neuromer - PMN paramedian nerve - PSO perisympathetic organ - SOG subesophageal ganglion - VDM ventral diaphragm muscles - VNC ventral nerve cord  相似文献   

14.
Rhythmic motor patterns underlying many types of locomotion are thought to be produced by central pattern generators (CPGs). Our knowledge of how CPG networks generate motor patterns in complex nervous systems remains incomplete, despite decades of work in a variety of model organisms. Substrate borne locomotion in Drosophila larvae is driven by waves of muscular contraction that propagate through multiple body segments. We use the motor circuitry underlying crawling in larval Drosophila as a model to try to understand how segmentally coordinated rhythmic motor patterns are generated. Whereas muscles, motoneurons and sensory neurons have been well investigated in this system, far less is known about the identities and function of interneurons. Our recent study identified a class of glutamatergic premotor interneurons, PMSIs (period-positive median segmental interneurons), that regulate the speed of locomotion. Here, we report on the identification of a distinct class of glutamatergic premotor interneurons called Glutamatergic Ventro-Lateral Interneurons (GVLIs). We used calcium imaging to search for interneurons that show rhythmic activity and identified GVLIs as interneurons showing wave-like activity during peristalsis. Paired GVLIs were present in each abdominal segment A1-A7 and locally extended an axon towards a dorsal neuropile region, where they formed GRASP-positive putative synaptic contacts with motoneurons. The interneurons expressed vesicular glutamate transporter (vGluT) and thus likely secrete glutamate, a neurotransmitter known to inhibit motoneurons. These anatomical results suggest that GVLIs are premotor interneurons that locally inhibit motoneurons in the same segment. Consistent with this, optogenetic activation of GVLIs with the red-shifted channelrhodopsin, CsChrimson ceased ongoing peristalsis in crawling larvae. Simultaneous calcium imaging of the activity of GVLIs and motoneurons showed that GVLIs’ wave-like activity lagged behind that of motoneurons by several segments. Thus, GVLIs are activated when the front of a forward motor wave reaches the second or third anterior segment. We propose that GVLIs are part of the feedback inhibition system that terminates motor activity once the front of the motor wave proceeds to anterior segments.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: At the end of each molt, insects shed their old cuticle by performing the ecdysis sequence, an innate behavior consisting of three steps: pre-ecdysis, ecdysis, and postecdysis. Blood-borne ecdysis-triggering hormone (ETH) activates the behavioral sequence through direct actions on the central nervous system. RESULTS: To elucidate neural substrates underlying the ecdysis sequence, we identified neurons expressing ETH receptors (ETHRs) in Drosophila. Distinct ensembles of ETHR neurons express numerous neuropeptides including kinin, FMRFamides, eclosion hormone (EH), crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP), myoinhibitory peptides (MIP), and bursicon. Real-time imaging of intracellular calcium dynamics revealed sequential activation of these ensembles after ETH action. Specifically, FMRFamide neurons are activated during pre-ecdysis; EH, CCAP, and CCAP/MIP neurons are active prior to and during ecdysis; and activity of CCAP/MIP/bursicon neurons coincides with postecdysis. Targeted ablation of specific ETHR ensembles produces behavioral deficits consistent with their proposed roles in the behavioral sequence. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings offer novel insights into how a command chemical orchestrates an innate behavior by stepwise recruitment of central peptidergic ensembles.  相似文献   

16.
We have tested the effect of a known insect neuromodulator, octopamine, on flight initiation in the cockroach. Using minimally dissected animals, we found that octopamine lowered the threshold for windevoked initiation of flight when applied to either of two major synaptic sites in the flight circuitry: 1) the last abdominal ganglion, where wind-sensitive neurons from the cerci excite dorsal giant interneurons, or 2) the metathoracic ganglion, where the dorsal giant interneurons activate interneurons and motoneurons which are involved in producing the rhythmic flight motor pattern in the flight muscles (Fig. 2).Correlated with this change in flight initiation threshold, we found that octopamine applied to the last abdominal ganglion increased the number of action potentials produced by individual dorsal giant interneurons when recruiting the cereal wind-sensitive neurons with wind puffs (Figs. 3, 4, 5) or with extracellular stimulation of their axons (Fig. 6). Octopamine increases the excitability of the giant interneurons (Figs. 7, 8). Also, when we stimulated individual dorsal giant interneurons intracellularly, the number of action potentials needed to initiate flight was reduced when octopamine was applied to the metathoracic ganglion (Fig. 9).Abbreviations EMG electromyogram - dGIs dorsal giant interneurons - GI giant interneuron - A6 sixth abdominal ganglion - T3 third thoracic ganglion - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
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   

19.
Phenylalanine and tyrosine concentrations were measured in the haemolymph, fat body, and abdominal integument of the American cockroach, Periplaneta americana, during the pre- and post-ecdysial periods of cuticle formation and sclerotization.Gas-liquid chromatography of trimethylsilyl derivatives of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and their metabolites provided a very sensitive and rapid method for determining those amino acids in small haemolymph and tissue samples.Haemolymph tyrosine increased in two stages: initially near apolysis and 16 to 25 hr pre-ecdysis, reaching its highest concentration at ecdysis (3·5 μg tyrosine/mg haemolymph). During that time, total haemolymph tyrosine increased by approximately 700 μg/insect. Fat body and abdominal integument began to accumulate tyrosine near apolysis. Fat body tyrosine peaked between ecdysis and 3·3 hr post-ecdysis whereas abdominal integument tyrosine peaked at ecdysis. Maximum concentrations were 6·0 μg and 4·1 μg tyrosine/mg wet wt. of tissue, respectively. Between ecdysis and 24 hr post-ecdysis, the period of maximum sclerotization, total tyrosine in haemolymph and fat body decreased by approximately 600 μg and 420 μg/insect, respectively. Phenylalanine concentrations did not change significantly in the haemolymph, fat body, or abdominal integument during the pre- and post-ecdysial periods.The cockroach apparently does not store free phenylalanine or tyrosine in the fat body during larval development as compared to tyrosine storage in some Diptera. The rapid increase of haemolymph, fat body, and integument tyrosine just prior to ecdysis suggests another form of storage for this important amino acid.  相似文献   

20.
The escape system of the American cockroach is both fast and directional. In response to wind stimulation both of these characteristics are largely due to the properties of the ventral giant interneurons (vGIs), which conduct sensory information from the cerci on the rear of the animal to type A thoracic interneurons (TIAs) in the thoracic ganglia. The cockroach also escapes from tactile stimuli, and although vGIs are not involved in tactile-mediated escapes, the same thoracic interneurons process tactile sensory information. The response of TIAs to tactile information is typically biphasic. A rapid initial depolarization is followed by a longer latency depolarization that encodes most if not all of the directional information in the tactile stimulus. We report here that the biphasic response of TIAs to tactile stimulation is caused by two separate conducting pathways from the point of stimulation to the thoracic ganglia. Phase 1 is generated by mechanical conduction along the animal's body cuticle or other physical structures. It cannot be eliminated by complete lesion of the nerve cord, and it is not evoked in response to electrical stimulation of abdominal nerves that contain the axons of sensory receptors in abdominal segments. However, it can be eliminated by lesioning the abdominal nerve cord and nerve 7 of the metathoracic ganglion together, suggesting that the relevant sensory structures send axons in nerve 7 and abdominal nerves of anterior abdominal ganglia. Phase 2 of the TIAs tactile response is generated by a typical neural pathway that includes mechanoreceptors in each abdominal segment, which project to interneurons with axons in either abdominal connective. Those interneurons with inputs from receptors that are ipsilateral to their axon have a greater influence on TIAs than those that receive inputs from the contralateral side. The phase 1 response has an important role in reducing initiation time for the escape response. Animals in which the phase 2 pathway has been eliminated by lesion of the abdominal nerve cord are still capable of generating a partial startle response with a typically short latency even when stimulated posterior to the lesion. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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