首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The sweet potato hornworm, Agrius convolvuli, possesses a pair of anterior cardiac nerves innervating the dorsal vessel. The anterior cardiac nerves branch off the visceral nerve that arises posteriorly from the frontal ganglion. Heartbeat reversal from anterograde heartbeat to posterograde heartbeat is triggered by the anterior cardiac nerves. Application of octopamine (OA) during the anterograde heartbeat phase reverses the anterograde heartbeat to the posterograde heartbeat, while application of OA during the phase of posterograde heartbeat accelerates heartbeat. The heartbeat reversal from anterograde heartbeat to posterograde heartbeat evoked by stimuli applied to the visceral nerve is blocked by application of the octopaminergic antagonists, phentolamine and chlorpromazine. The results suggest that OA may be a neurotransmitter for the anterior cardiac nerve. The alary muscle of the second segment receives excitatory innervation from the posterior cardiac nerve and from the nerve which extends from the second abdominal ganglion. Activation of the alary muscle results in acceleration of posterograde heartbeat. Other neurotransmitters, besides OA, may take part in the resultant acceleration.  相似文献   

2.
Previously described salines for lepidoptera did not maintain a constant heart rate for a very long. We have been successful in maintaining a normal heartbeat for many hours in a newly designed saline. This saline was also suitable for maintaining normal neuromuscular junctional potentials. The cardiac reflexes studied in larvae of Bombyx and Agrius were five types of cardiac responses induced by mechanical stimuli to sensillar setae. The cardiac responses were caused by electrical stimulation of nerves in the reflex pathways. The antidromic heartbeat was triggered even in larvae before the 5th instar by stimulation of axons in the visceral nerve arising from the frontal ganglion and terminating at the aorta, while spontaneous heartbeat reversal started to occur in wandering larvae. Other axons in the visceral nerve terminate at the rear end of the heart. Electrical stimuli to the nerves caused cardiac inhibition of the orthodromic heartbeat. Nerves extending from the visceral nerve to the alary muscles of the 2nd abdominal segment contain axons to increase the tone of the muscles. Nerves extending from the 7th abdominal ganglion to the most posterior alary muscles also contain axons to increase the tone of the muscles, and were responsible for acceleration of the antidromic and orthodromic heartbeat, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The objective of this study was to locate nerves arising from the CNS that have a cardioregulatory function in the tarantula, Eurypelma marxi Simon. Ramifications of the paired abdominal nerve VIIIb merge with the cardiac ganglion within the first heart segment. Electrical stimulation of the branches of nerve VIIIb that connect with the cardiac ganglion produce changes in heartbeat rate and amplitude. Nerve cutting experiments indicate that no other cardioregulatory nerves are present. Both increases and decreases in heart activity can be produced upon electrical stimulation of nerve VIIIb on each side of the heart. Only one action potential associated with the response of each type could be recorded in each member of the nerve pair. Therefore, we conclude that there are two inhibitory and two acceleratory neurons that arise in the central nervous system to modulate heartbeat activity. The inhibitory effect becomes maximal at a stimulation frequency of 20-30 Hz and the accelerator effect at 30-40 Hz. The aftereffect of acceleratory nerve activity exceeds that of inhibitory nerve activity. When the inhibitor and accelerator are activated simultaneously, the inhibitor dominates. The regulatory nerves interact with neurons in the cardiac ganglion. During inhibition, the number of externally recorded spikes in each ganglionic burst is decreased. The rate and magnitude of the heartbeat are decreased concomitantly. Stimulation of the accelerator enhances electrical activity in the cardiac ganglion at the same time that the heartbeat rate and amplitude are increased.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Cellular properties and modulation of the identified neurons of the posterior cardiac plate-pyloric system in the stomatogastric ganglion of a stomatopod, Squilla oratoria, were studied electrophysiologically. Each class of neurons involved in the cyclic bursting activity was able to trigger an endogenous, slow depolarizing potential (termed a driver potential) which sustained bursting. Endogenous oscillatory properties were demonstrated by the phase reset behavior in response to brief stimuli during ongoing rhythm. The driver potential was produced by membrane voltage-dependent activation and terminated by an active repolarization. Striking enhancement of bursting properties of all the cell types was induced by synaptic activation via extrinsic nerves, seen as increases in amplitude or duration of driver potentials, spiking rate during a burst, and bursting rate. The motor pattern produced under the influence of extrinsic modulatory inputs continued for a long time, relative to that in the absence of activation of modulatory inputs. Voltage-dependent conductance mechanisms underlying postinhibitory rebound and driver potential responses were modified by inputs. It is concluded that endogenous cellular properties, as well as synaptic circuitry and extrinsic inputs, contribute to generation of the rhythmic motor pattern, and that a motor system and its component neurons have been highly conserved during evolution between stomatopods and decapods.Abbreviations AB anterior burster neuron - CoG commissural ganglion - CPG central pattern generator - lvn lateral ventricular nerve - OG oesophageal ganglion - pcp posterior cardiac plate - PCP pcp constrictor neuron - PD pyloric dilator neuron - PY pyloric constrictor neuron - son superior oesophageal nerve - STG stomatogastric ganglion - stn stomatogastric nerve  相似文献   

6.
The anatomy of neurons of the stomatogastric nervous system of Ascheta domesticus was studied using heavy metal iontophoresis through cut nerve ends followed by silver intensification. Nineteen categories of neuron are described and compared with neurons known from the stomatogastric nervous system of other insects. Possible functions for the neurons are suggested. Motor neuron candidates are suggested for all parts of the gut served by the stomatogastric nervous system, and axons of sensory neurons of the anterior pharynx are located. There are four neuron types that cannot readily be assigned motor, sensory, or interneuron functions: large dorsal cells of the frontal ganglion; the two neurons of the nervus connectivus, and two categories of neurons in the median neurosecretory cell group of the pars intercerebralis, the axons of which are contained in the stomatogastric nerves.  相似文献   

7.
Wholemount immunohistochemical methods were used to examine the localization of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate within the cardiac system of the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus. All of the GABA-like immunoreactivity (GABAi) in the cardiac ganglion originated from a single bilateral pair of fibers that entered the heart via the two dorsal nerves. Each GABAi axon bifurcated upon entering the ganglion and gave rise to varicose fibers that surrounded the somata and initial segments of the five large motor neurons. The four small posterior cells did not appear to receive somatic contacts. Double-labeling experiments in which individual motor neurons were injected with Neurobiotin showed that their dendritic processes, which project to muscle bundles adjacent to the ganglion and are thought to respond to stretch, were also accompanied by branches of the GABAi fibers. Glutamate-like immunoreactivity (GLUi) was present in each of the motor neuron cell bodies. In some preparations, GLUi was also detected in large caliber fibers in the major ganglionic nerves. These fibers gave rise to more slender branches that innervated the cardiac muscle bundles. GLUi was also found in the small cell bodies and in fibers surrounding motor neuron somata. Taken together, these findings support previous electrophysiological, pharmacological and anatomical studies indicating that GABA mediates extrinsic inhibition and that glutamate acts as a neuromuscular and intraganglionic transmitter in this system. While axosomatic contacts may play a major role in both transmitter systems, the GABAergic inhibition also appears to involve substantial axodendritic synaptic signaling.  相似文献   

8.
两种软体动物神经系统一氧化氮合酶的组织化学定位   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
运用一氧化氮合酶(NOS)组织化学方法研究了软体动物门双壳纲种类中国蛤蜊和腹足纲种类嫁Qi神经系统中NOS阳性细胞以及阳性纤维的分布。结果表明:在蛤蜊脑神经节腹内侧,每侧约有10-15个细胞呈强NOS阳性反应,其突起也呈强阳性反应,并经脑足神经节进入足神经节的中央纤维网中;足神经节内只有2个细胞呈弱阳性反应,其突起较短,进入足神经节中央纤维网中,但足神经节中,来自脑神经节阳性细胞和外周神经系统的纤维大多呈NOS阳性反应;脏神经节的前内侧部和后外侧部各有一个阳性细胞团,其突起分别进入后闭壳肌水管后外套膜神经和脑脏神经索。脏神经节背侧小细胞层以及联系两侧小细胞层的纤维也呈NOS阳性反应。嫁Qi中枢神经系统各神经节中没有发现NOS阳性胞体存在;脑神经节、足神经节、侧神经节以及脑—侧、脑—足、侧—脏连索中均有反应程度不同的NOS阳性纤维,这些纤维均源于外周神经。与已研究的软体动物比较,嫁Qi和前鳃亚纲其它种类一样,神经系统中NO作为信息分子可能主要存在于感觉神经。而中国蛤蜊的神经系统中一氧化氮作为信息分子则可能参与更广泛的神经调节过程。  相似文献   

9.
Summary The heart of the nudibranch mollusc Archidoris montereyensis is regulated by a small number of powerful effector neurons located in the right pleural and visceral ganglia. Two identifiable neurons in the pleural ganglion, a heart excitor (plHE) and a heart inhibitor (PlHI), are especially important regulators of cardiac function in that low levels of spontaneous activity in either cell significantly alters the amplitude and rate of heart contractions. These neurons have extensive dendritic arbors within the right pleural ganglion and branching axonal processes within the visceral ganglion. The visceral ganglion also contains a heart excitor neuron (VHE) and at least two heart inhibitor neurons (VHI cells), but their influence on cardiac activity is weaker than that of the pleural ganglion cells. All of these heart effector cells appear to be motor neurons with axons that terminate predominately in the atrio-ventricular valve region of the heart via the pericardial nerve. The simplicity and strength of these neuronal connections to the heart of Archidoris make this a favorable preparation for studies of cardiac regulation.Abbreviations Pl HE pleural ganglion heart excitor neuron - Pl HI pleural heart inhibitor neuron - V HE visceral ganglion heart excitor neuron - V HI cells, visceral heart inhibitor neurons - V K visceral kidney excitor neuron - V G visceral gill excitor neuron  相似文献   

10.
Gill motor neuron L7-induced longitudinal shortening of the gill in Aplysia kurodai and A. juliana was suppressed when extracellular stimuli were applied to a restricted dorsal central region of the abdominal ganglion. We found a neuron there which antagonized the L7-driven contraction. Since the contraction was suppressed when the identified neuron was activated simultaneously with L7, we refer to the newly found neuron as “Anti-L7”. Anti-L7 did not change the L7 impulse generation in the abdominal ganglion. No direct synaptic connection from L7 to Anti-L7 was detected. A fluorescent dye injected into the soma of Anti-L7 revealed that the neuron sent axonal branches to the branchial nerve. These results may show that Anti-L7 antagonizes L7 at the periphery inside the gill, rather than in the abdominal ganglion. EJPs induced by L7 were unaffected by Anti-L7. Activation of Anti-L7 alone did not induce any change in tone or membrane potential of the gill musculature. The suppressive effect of Anti-L7 lasts many seconds after the cessation of a train of Anti-L7 impulses. The results may suggest that the suppression is mediated through an inhibitory neuromodulatory mechanism without inhibition of L7 itself. Accepted: 1 April 1999  相似文献   

11.
Silver impregnation of serial histological sections of the tubeworm Chaetopterus variopedatus revealed the presence of a subepidermal nervous system. The anterior nervous system is delimited by the first 11 segments and comprises (1) two dorsolateral cerebral ganglia and lateral instead of ventral nerve cords which are widely separated and thus connected by unusually long commissures, (2) a pharyngeal ganglion in the fourth segment which is connected to the cerebral ganglia by pharyngeal nerves and constitutes along with the pharyngeal plexus a stomatogastric or enteric nervous system, and (3) small, presumably segmental ganglionic swellings along the lateral nerve cords from which emerge commissures and parapodial nerves. No subesophageal ganglion or periesophageal connective could be identified. The lateral nerve cords converge toward the midline in the 12th segment to form the posterior nervous system comprising a pair of ventromedian nerve cords with their repetitive segmental ganglia from which emerge numerous short commissures and three segmental nerves coursing toward the dorsal and ventral regions of parapods and toward the neuropod. Light and electron microscopic investigations of cerebral and segmental ganglia showed an arrangement of inner neuropile and of unipolar neuron somata at the periphery. The neuropile comprises numerous neurites ranging in diameter from 0.5 to 10 μm and making polarized or symmetrical synaptic junctions with each other. The pharyngeal ganglion consists of a similar neuropile and of a large mass of cell bodies which is traversed by an elaborate network of sinuses and harbors three types of neurosecretory cells in addition to the conventional neuron somata. These findings are interpreted in the framework of the highly specialized morphological features and habits of Chaetopterus, and the welldeveloped stomatogastric system is considered to be related to control of the feeding activities.  相似文献   

12.
  • 1.1. The axonal pathways of thirteen giant neurons identified in the right parietal and the visceral ganglia, found in the suboesophageal ganglia of an African giant snail (Achatina fulica Férussac), were investigated by intracellular injections of Lucifer Yellow, with regard to their axonal projections into the following six peripheral nerves: lap n (left anterior palliai nerve), lpp n (left posterior palliai nerve), int n (intestinal nerve), anal n (anal nerve), rpp n (right posterior palliai nerve) and rap n (right anterior palliai nerve).
  • 2.2. These projections were confirmed by the recording of the axonal responses from the nerves.
  • 3.3. On the dorsal surface of the right parietal ganglion, the following four giant neurons were identified: PON (periodically oscillating neuron), TAN (tonically autoactive neuron), RAPN (right anterior palliai neuron), and d-RPLN (dorsal-right parietal large neuron).
  • 4.4. The PON axonal pathways projected into int n; those of TAN into all of the nerves examined; those of RAPN into lap n, lpp n, int n, anal n and rap n.; and those of d-RPLN into pd nn (pedal nerves) through the pedal ganglia, lpp n, anal n, rap n and sometimes lap n.
  • 5.5. On the dorsal surface of the visceral ganglion, the following four giant neurons were also identified: VIN (visceral intermittently firing neuron), FAN (frequently autoactive neuron), INN (intestinal nerve neuron) and d-VLN (dorsal-visceral large neuron).
  • 6.6. The VIN axonal pathways, which had no branch into the six nerves examined, went to both the right and the left pedal ganglia, sending a branch into the cerebro-pleural connective; those of FAN projected into lap n, anal n and rap n, and sometimes into lpp n and rpp n; those of INN into int n; and those of d-VLN into pd nn, lap n, lpp n, anal n and rap n.
  • 7.7. On the ventral surface of the right parietal ganglion, v-RPLN (ventral-right parietal large neuron) was identified. The axonal pathways went to pd nn, lap n, lpp n, anal n and rap n.
  • 8.8. On the ventral surface of the visceral ganglion, the four giant neurons, v-VNAN (ventral-visceral noisy autoactive neuron), v-VLN (ventral-visceral large neuron), r-VMN (right-visceral multiple spike neuron) and 1-VMN (left-visceral multiple spike neuron) were identified.
  • 9.9. The axonal pathway of v-VNAN projected into rpp n and rap n; those of v-VLN into pd nn, lap n, anal n, rap n and sometimes to lpp n; those of r-VMN into int n and rpp n; and those of 1-VMN also into int n and rpp n.
  • 10.10. The present morphologial investigations of the giant neurons confirmed well the identifications of the neurons previously studied. The axon of the neurons examined here, except for VIN, projected into some of the peripheral nerves, while the VIN axon extended into the cerebro-pleural connective.
  • 11.11. The five neurons, PON, TAN, v-VNAN, r-VMN and 1-VMN, formed fine axonal arborizations terminating at the neuropile, while the arborizations of the other neurons were not clearly observed.
  • 12.12. Although the anatomical structures of the portion examined of the suboesophageal ganglia are asymmetrical, three pairs of symmetrically-situated neurons, d-RPLN and d-VLN, v-RPLN and v-VLN, and r-VMN and 1-VMN, were found, indicating the existence of symmetrical components in the ganglia.
  相似文献   

13.
The heart of the nudibranch mollusc Archidoris montereyensis is regulated by a small number of powerful effector neurons located in the right pleural and visceral ganglia. Two identifiable neurons in the pleural ganglion, a heart excitor (PlHE) and a heart inhibitor (PlHI), are especially important regulators of cardiac function in that low levels of spontaneous activity in either cell significantly alters the amplitude and rate of heart contractions. These neurons have extensive dendritic arbors within the right pleural ganglion and branching axonal processes within the visceral ganglion. The visceral ganglion also contains a heart excitor neuron (VHE) and at least two heart inhibitor neurons (VHI cells), but their influence on cardiac activity is weaker than that of the pleural ganglion cells. All of these heart effector cells appear to be motor neurons with axons that terminate predominantly in the atrio-ventricular valve region of the heart via the pericardial nerve. The simplicity and strength of these neuronal connections to the heart of Archidoris make this a favorable preparation for studies of cardiac regulation.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Summary The stomatogastric nervous system of a mantis shrimp,Squilla oratoria, is described. The motor nerves of the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) and their innervation of muscles of the posterior cardiac plate (pcp) and pyloric systems are detailed.The STG contains more than 25 neurons. It sends out one pair of major output nerves. The pcp-pyloric cycle recorded from the motor axons in this nerve consists of rhythmic bursts of several units which fire with a characteristic phase relationship to each other. The rhythm is intrinsic to the STG itself, but it is modifiable.Recordings from the peripheral nerves reveal that identifiable cardiac plate, pyloric dilator and pyloric neurons control sequential contractions of the pcp and pyloric muscles to constrict or dilate a number of their attached ossicles.Several modulatory input fibres in the stomatogastric nerve, activated via stimulation of the superior or inferior oesophageal nerve (son, ion), prime or trigger the cyclic motor outputs. The son inputs induce distinct effects on the cardiac and pcp-pyloric pattern generators, while the ion inputs, via the oesophageal ganglion, excite only the pcp-pyloric generator.On the basis of anatomical and physiological observations, the possible functions of motor neurons involved in the pcp-pyloric cycle are described with reference to opening of the pcp and pyloric channels.This stomatogastric nervous system inSquilla is compared to that in decapods which has been well analyzed.Abbreviations CG commissural ganglion - ion inferior oesophageal nerve - lvn lateral ventricular nerve - OG oesophageal ganglion - pep posterior cardiac plate - son superior oesophageal nerve - STG stomatogastric ganglion - stn stomatogastric nerve - ivn inferior ventricular nerve  相似文献   

16.
The anatomy and functionality of the stomatogastric nervous system (SNS) of third-instar larvae of Calliphora vicina was characterised. As in other insects, the Calliphora SNS consists of several peripheral ganglia involved in foregut movement regulation. The frontal ganglion gives rise to the frontal nerve and is connected to the brain via the frontal connectives and antennal nerves (ANs). The recurrent nerve connects the frontal- to the hypocerebral ganglion from which the proventricular nerve runs to the proventricular ganglion. Foregut movements include rhythmic contractions of the cibarial dilator muscles (CDM), wavelike movements of crop and oesophagus and contractions of the proventriculus. Transections of SNS nerves indicate mostly myogenic crop and oesophagus movements and suggest modulatory function of the associated nerves. Neural activity in the ANs, correlating with postsynaptic potentials on the CDM, demonstrates a motor pathway from the brain to CDM. Crop volume is monitored by putative stretch receptors. The respective sensory pathway includes the recurrent nerve and the proventricular nerve. The dorsal organs (DOs) are directly connected to the SNS. Mechanical stimulation of the DOs evokes sensory activity in the AN. This suggests the DOs can provide sensory input for temporal coordination of feeding behaviour.  相似文献   

17.
To further elucidate the functional anatomy of canine cardiac innervation as well as to assess the feasibility of producing regional left ventricular sympathetic denervation, the chronotropic and (or) regional left ventricular inotropic responses produced by stellate or middle cervical ganglion stimulation were investigated in 22 dogs before and after sectioning of individual major cardiopulmonary or cardiac nerves. Sectioning the right or left subclavian ansae abolished all cardiac responses produced by ipsilateral stellate ganglion stimulation. Sectioning a major sympathetic cardiopulmonary nerve, other than the right interganglionic nerve, usually reduced, but seldom abolished, regional inotropic responses elicited by ipsilateral middle cervical ganglion stimulation. Sectioning the dorsal mediastinal cardiac nerves consistently abolished the left ventricular inotropic responses elicited by right middle cervical ganglion stimulation but minimally affected those elicited by left middle cervical ganglion stimulation. In contrast, cutting the left lateral cardiac nerve decreased the inotropic responses in lateral and posterior left ventricular segments elicited by left middle cervical ganglion stimulation but had little effect on the inotropic responses produced by right middle cervical ganglion stimulation. In addition, the ventral mediastinal cardiac nerve was found to be a significant sympathetic efferent pathway from the left-sided ganglia to the left ventricle. These results indicate that the stellate ganglia project axons to the heart via the subclavian ansae and thus effective sympathetic decentralization can be produced by cutting the subclavian ansae; the right-sided cardiac sympathetic efferent innervation of the left ventricle converges intrapericardially in the dorsal mediastinal cardiac nerves; and the left-sided cardiac sympathetic efferent innervation of the left ventricle diverges to innervate the left ventricle by a number of nerves including the dorsal mediastinal, ventral mediastinal, and left lateral cardiac nerves. Thus consistent denervation of a region of the left ventricle can not be accomplished by sectioning an individual cardiopulmonary or cardiac nerve because of the functional and anatomical variability of the neural components in each nerve, as well as the fact that overlapping regions of the left ventricle are innervated by these different nerves.  相似文献   

18.
The stomatogastric nervous system (SNS) associated with the foregut was studied in 3rd instar larvae of Drosophila melanogaster and Calliphora vicina (blowfly). In both species, the foregut comprises pharynx, esophagus, and proventriculus. Only in Calliphora does the esophagus form a crop. The position of nerves and neurons was investigated with neuronal tracers in both species and GFP expression in Drosophila. The SNS is nearly identical in both species. Neurons are located in the proventricular and the hypocerebral ganglion (HCG), which are connected to each other by the proventricular nerve. Motor neurons for pharyngeal muscles are located in the brain not, as in other insect groups, in the frontal ganglion. The position of the frontal ganglion is taken by a nerve junction devoid of neurons. The junction is composed of four nerves: the frontal connectives that fuse with the antennal nerves (ANs), the frontal nerve innervating the cibarial dilator muscles and the recurrent nerve that innervates the esophagus and projects to the HCG. Differences in the SNS are restricted to a crop nerve only present in Calliphora and an esophageal ganglion that only exists in Drosophila. The ganglia of the dorsal organs give rise to the ANs, which project to the brain. The extensive conformity of the SNS of both species suggests functional parallels. Future electrophysiological studies of the motor circuits in the SNS of Drosophila will profit from parallel studies of the homologous but more accessible structures in Calliphora.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
To determine the contribution of sucrose signals to swallowing motor patterns, a series of behavioral, morphological and electrophysiological experiments were carried out in the larvae of the silkworm, Bombyx mori. The larvae ingested a droplet of sucrose solution applied to the mouth. The rate of ingestion was increased for higher sucrose concentrations. The swallowing movements were produced by a cibarial pump system that consisted of a circular compressor and pairs of dilators. The circular compressor was innervated by at least two dorsal motor neurons with the somata in the frontal ganglion. One of these neurons with arborized in both the frontal ganglion and the tritocerebrum of the brain. Both extra- and intracellular recording from the compressor showed that the rhythmic motor patterns were modified by different concentration of sucrose. A higher concentration of sucrose lengthened the duration of a burst or caused more excitatory junction potentials (EJPs) in the compressor, resulting in stronger swallowing contractions. Transection of both frontal connectives deleted the sucrose response, but spontaneous rhythmic motor patterns remained in the compressor, suggesting that the motor rhythm could be generated in the frontal ganglion, and triggered and/or modified by sucrose signals processed through the tritocerebrum of the brain.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号