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1.
SIFamides form a group of highly conserved neuropeptides in insects, crustaceans, and chelicerates. Beyond their biochemical commonalities, the neuroanatomical distribution of SIFamide in the insect nervous system also shows a remarkable degree of conservation. Thus, expression of SIFamide has been found to be restricted to four neurons of the pars intercerebralis in different holometabolous species. By means of immunohistological stainings, we here show that in Manduca sexta, those four cells are complemented by additional immunoreactive cells located in the vicinity of the mushroom body calyx. Immunopositive processes form arborizations throughout the brain, innervating major neuropils like the antennal lobes, the central complex, and the optic neuropils.  相似文献   

2.
The antennae of the sphinx moth Manduca sexta are multimodal sense organs, each comprising three segments: scape, pedicel, and flagellum. Each antenna is moved by two systems of muscles, one controlling the movement of the scape and consisting of five muscles situated in the head capsule (extrinsic muscles), and the other system located within the scape (intrinsic muscles) and consisting of four muscles that move the pedicel. At least seven motoneurons innervate the extrinsic muscles, and at least five motoneurons innervate the intrinsic muscles. The dendritic fields of the antennal motoneurons overlap one another extensively and are located in the neuropil of the antennal mechanosensory and motor center. The density of motoneuronal arborizations is greatest in the lateral part of this neuropil region and decreases more medially. None of the motoneurons exhibits a contralateral projection. The cell bodies of motoneurons innervating the extrinsic muscles are distributed throughout an arching band of neuronal somata dorsal and dorsolateral to the neuropil of the antennal mechanosensory and motor center, whereas the cell bodies of motoneurons innervating the intrinsic muscles reside mainly among the neuronal somata situated dorsolateral to that neuropil. Received: 30 March 1996 / Accepted: 23 June 1996  相似文献   

3.
1.  The physiology and morphology of olfactory interneurons in the brain of larval Manduca sexta were studied using intracellular recording and staining techniques. Antennal olfactory receptors were stimulated with volatile substances from plants and with pure odorants. Neurons responding to the stimuli were investigated further to reveal their response specificities, dose-response characteristics, and morphology.
2.  We found no evidence of specific labeled-lines among the odor-responsive interneurons, as none responded exclusively to one plant odor or pure odorant; most olfactory interneurons were broadly tuned in their response spectra. This finding is consistent with an across-fiber pattern of odor coding.
3.  Mechanosensory and olfactory information are integrated at early stages of central processing, appearing in the responses of some local interneurons restricted to the primary olfactory nucleus in the brain, the larval antennal center (LAC).
4.  The responses of LAC projection neurons and higher-order protocerebral interneurons to a given odor were more consistent than the responses of LAC local interneurons.
5.  The LAC appears to be functionally subdivided, as both local and projection neurons had arborizations in specific parts of the LAC, but none had dendrites throughout the LAC.
6.  The mushroom bodies and the lateral protocerebrum contain neurons that respond to olfactory stimulation.
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4.
5.
Sexually receptive female moths and many other insects releasechemical attractants (sex pheromones) to lure conspecific mates.Recent evidence indicates, moreover, that the odor plume formeddownwind from the female possesses a discontinuous structurethat appears to provide the searching male with orientationcues.Using intracellular methods, we find that many central olfactoryneurons in male moths (Manduca sexta) can track pulsed pheromonalstimuli precisely. The cells respond to each brief odor pulsewith a similarly brief burst of action potentials, and the separationbetween response bursts is aided by inhibitory synaptic input.Furthermore, these neurons appear to participate in at leasttwo levels of ‘feature detection’: they respondselectively to pheromonal stimuli, and they follow pulsed stimulationonly in a limited range of frequencies Above the frequency limit,the cells respond as if the male is stimulated by a prolonged,uniform concentration of pheromone. The ability of these neuronsto encode changes in the temporal characteristics of pheromonalstimuli may provide the male with positional cues to help himlocate the pheromone source over long distances.  相似文献   

6.
Summary We have used a cytochemical technique to investigate the distribution of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in the antenna of the sphinx moth Manduca sexta. High levels of echothiophate-insensitive (presumably intracellular) AChE activity were found in six different types of antennal receptors localized in specific regions of the three antennal segments of the adult moth. Mechanosensory organs in the scape and pedicel, the Böhm bristles and Johnston's organ, are innervated by AChE-positive neurons. In each annulus of the antennal flagellum, AChE-positive neurons are associated with six sensilla chaetica and a peg organ, probably a sensillum styloconicum. At least 112 receptor neurons (8–10 per annulus) innervating the intersegmental membranes between the 14 distalmost annuli also exhibit high levels of echothiophate-resistant AChE. In addition, each annulus has more than 30 AChE-positive somata in the epidermis of the scale-covered (back) side of the flagellum, and 4 AChE-positive somata reside within the first annulus of the flagellum. Since none of the olfactory receptor neurons show a high level of echothiophateresistant AChE activity, and all known mechanoreceptors are AChE-positive, apparently intracellular AChE activity in the antenna correlates well with mechanosensory functions and is consistent with the idea that these cells employ acetylcholine as a neurotransmitter.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The ganglionated plexus of the trachea of mice was studied quantitatively with a histochemical method that stains electively the ganglion nerve cells in whole-mount preparations. The plexus lies exclusively over the muscular part of the trachea, dorsal to the muscle itself, and it varies considerably in pattern and extent between individual animals. In young adult mice the plexus contains on average 235 neurons, occurring singly or gathered in packed ganglia. The ganglion neurons are relatively small, the profile area of three quarters of them measuring between 150 and 275 m2 with an average of 251 m2. In ageing mice the average number of ganglion neurons is the same as in young animals; however, cell sizes are markedly increased, the average being 341 m2. Among the ultrastructural features of the ganglia, is a capsule (perineurium) of very regular structure, the presence of collagen, capillaries and myelinated axons inside the ganglia, and the presence of only few and short dendrites, some of which are abutted by synapsing nerve endings.  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.
10.
Using intra- and extracellular recording methods, we studied the activity of pheromone-responsive projection neurons in the antennal lobe of the moth Manduca sexta. Intracellularly recorded responses of neurons to antennal stimulation with the pheromone blend characteristically included both inhibitory and excitatory stages of various strengths. To observe the activity of larger groups of neurons, we recorded responses extracellularly in the macroglomerular complex of the antennal lobe. The macroglomerular complex is part of a specialized olfactory subsystem and the site of first-order central processing of sex-pheromonal information. Odors such as the pheromone blend and host-plant (tobacco) volatiles gave rise to evoked potentials that were reproducible upon repeated antennal stimulation. Evoked potentials showed overriding high-frequency oscillations when the antenna was stimulated with the pheromone blend or with either one of the two key pheromone components. The frequency of the oscillations was in the range of 30–50 Hz. Amplitude and frequency of the oscillations varied during the response to pheromonal stimulation. Recording intracellular and extracellular activity simultaneously revealed phase-locking of action potentials to potential oscillations. The results suggest that the activity of neurons of the macroglomerular complex was temporally synchronized, potentially to strengthen the pheromone signal and to improve olfactory perception. Accepted: 19 December 1997  相似文献   

11.
12.
The modulatory actions of 5-hydroxy-tryptamine (5HT or serotonin) on a morphologically identifiable class of neurons dissociated from antennal lobes of Manduca sexta at stages 9–15 of the 18 stages of metamorphic adult development were examined in vitro with whole-cell patch-clamp recording techniques. Action potentials could be elicited from approximately 20% of the cells. These cells were used to examine effects of 5HT (5 × 10–6 to 5 × 10–4 M) on cell excitability and action-potential waveform. 5HT increased the number of spikes elicited by a constant depolarizing current pulse and reduced the latency of responses. 5HT also led to broadening of action potentials in these neurons and increased cell input resistance. Modulation of potassium channels by 5HT is likely to contribute to these responses. 5HT causes reversible reduction of at least 3 distinct potassium currents, one of which is described for the first time in this study. Because effects of 5HT on antennal-lobe neurons in culture mimic those observed in situ in the brain of the adult moth, in vitro analysis should contribute to elucidation of the cellular mechanisms that underlie the modulatory effects of 5HT on central olfactory neurons in the moth.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Computer-assisted neuroanatomical methods have been used to demonstrate unique identities of the glomeruli of the antennal lobes (ALs) in males of the sphinx moth Manduca sexta. The glomerular neuropil consists of the male-specific macroglomerular complex, which comprises two closely apposed bulky subunits, and 64±1 ordinary glomeruli arrayed in a shell around a central region of coarse neuropil. Computergenerated maps show the exact locations of all glomeruli and adjacent groups of neuronal somata in a constant Cartesian coordinate system, such that these can be accurately identified in any individual. The glomeruli belong to three classes according to the number and type of identification criteria they satisfy. The larger class comprises glomeruli (n=44) identified only in the computer-generated maps on the basis of their relative positions. The other two classes include glomeruli that were also identified in sections, either directly from their proximity to readily identifiable structures and their shape and size (n=10, including the labial-palp-pit-organ (LPO) glomerulus), or indirectly from their positions relative to the former (n=9). Two very small glomeruli were present in only one AL, demonstrating the existence of anomalous glomeruli, whereas another glomerulus had no homologue in both ALs of one individual. The true number of ordinary glomeruli (per male AL) was thus estimated to be 64. The uncertainty in delineating some glomeruli might affect this number without implying modification of the homologies proposed. The locations of tracts and cell groups, both within and near the AL, are also invariant with respect to glomeruli, as shown in the computer maps. The methods employed are general and might be useful to researchers in related fields. The results obtained call for more attention to the precise geometry of neural structures.  相似文献   

14.
Antennal lobes of adult male and female Manduca sexta were compared in order to investigate the nature and extent of sexual dimorphism of the primary olfactory center of this lepidopteran species. Complete identification of the glomeruli led to the conclusion that all female glomeruli have homologous male counterparts. Thus, there is no sex-specific glomerulus present in one sex and absent in the other. Sexual dimorphism (i.e. glomeruli present but morphologically different in males and females), however, does occur in the three glomeruli composing the male macroglomerular complex. The female homologs of this complex consist of two previously identified 'large female glomeruli' and one newly identified normal-sized glomerulus. The lateral and medial large female glomeruli are interpreted to be homologous to the first two macroglomerular-complex glomeruli-the cumulus and toroid 1. The third male component, the toroid 2, was tentatively identified with a normal-sized spheroidal glomerulus of the female, called here the 'small female glomerulus'. The 60 'ordinary' glomeruli that make up the rest of the glomerular neuropil were found to be homologous in males and females, with the exception of two anomalous (or uncertain) glomeruli. Some variations in relative position and size observed among those glomeruli suggest a diffuse, quantitative kind of sexual dimorphism.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Responses of neurons in the antennal lobe (AL) of the moth Manduca sexta to stimulation of the ipsilateral antenna by odors consist of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic potentials. Stimulation of primary afferent fibers by electrical shock of the antennal nerve causes a characteristic IPSP-EPSP synaptic response in AL projection neurons. The IPSP in projection neurons reverses below the resting potential, is sensitive to changes in external and internal chloride concentration, and thus is apparently mediated by an increase in chloride conductance. The IPSP is reversibly blocked by 100 microM picrotoxin or bicuculline. Many AL neurons respond to application of GABA with a strong hyperpolarization and an inhibition of spontaneous spiking activity. GABA responses are associated with an increase in neuronal input conductance and a reversal potential below the resting potential. Application of GABA blocks inhibitory synaptic inputs and reduces or blocks excitatory inputs. EPSPs can be protected from depression by application of GABA. Muscimol, a GABA analog that mimics GABA responses at GABAA receptors but not at GABAB receptors in the vertebrate CNS, inhibits many AL neurons in the moth.  相似文献   

17.
In the moth, Manduca sexta, 3′,5′‐guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) is transiently elevated during adult development in about 100 neurons of the antennal lobe. We demonstrate that nearly all of these neurons are local interneurons of the lateral cluster I, that their capacity to show a strong cGMP response during development is regulated by the steroid hormone 20‐hydroxyecdysone, and that in a subpopulation of these neurons cGMP elevation seems to be controlled directly by the gaseous messenger molecule nitric oxide (NO). Treatment with the acetylcholine esterase inhibitor eserine, antennal nerve transection, and electrical stimulation of the antennae suggest that NO/cGMP signaling during development is an activity‐dependent process. Besides input from the antennae, input from the central brain and the ventral ganglia is involved in upregulating cGMP in the antennal‐lobe neurons. Possible sources are centrifugal aminergic neurons, since application of serotonin and histamine enhances the GMP signal in local interneurons. Comparing the time course of cGMP elevation with events occurring during development leads us to the hypothesis that the NO/cGMP signaling pathway might be involved in synapse formation of a subset of antennal‐lobe neurons. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 41: 359–375, 1999  相似文献   

18.
19.
In the moth Manduca sexta, the paired mesothoracic flight steering muscle II PD2m takes part in the generation of the flight rhythm and is spontaneously active in the non-flying animal. This spontaneous activity is modulated by optomotor stimuli and directionally selective. The directional response characteristics are analyzed. Another spontaneously active steering muscle pair, the III PD2c, is situated in the metathorax. The activities of this pair and of a third muscle pair, the III PD3 are also influenced by visual stimulation.The responses of all 6 muscles to optomotor stimuli which simulate the flight situations yaw, roll, thrust and lift are analyzed. Each situation elicits a unique pattern of activation/deactivation within this set of muscles. The activity pattern in non-flying animals allows the prediction of flight steering mechanisms such as changes of wing area in flight turns and provides a useful basis for the analysis of visuo-motor pathways.  相似文献   

20.
Moths possess highly tuned olfactory capabilities, which can detect very low concentrations of pheromonal odorants. Much is known about the structure and function of the moth olfactory system with respect to detection of pheromones. However, we lack an understanding of the broader olfactory system, in particular, to what degree are moths capable of detecting and discriminating odorants that are not components of pheromone blends. Here we describe a methodology used to investigate the discriminability of nonpheromonal odors in moths. In a series of experiments we show that the moth Manduca sexta can (1) discriminate a number of different odors but (2) that methyl jasmonate, neither readily conditions to a food reward nor is it readily discriminated from another odor. The lack of a response to methyl jasmonate may be related to its role in host plant defense. This work provides a basis for future mapping of physiological and pharmacological studies of nonpheromonal coding in insects onto learned behavioral responses to those odorants.  相似文献   

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