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1.
The salivary gland of the locust, Locusta migratoria, is innervated from the suboesophageal ganglion by two neurones, SN1 and SN2 which innervate the gland via the salivary gland nerve (nerve 7B of the suboesophageal ganglion). In addition, like most other peripheral nerves of the head, this nerve carries on its outer surface axons and neurohaemal terminal ramifications of the so called satellite nervous system, established by a group of neurosecretory cells also located in the suboesophageal ganglion. These superficial collaterals ramify over the nerve from its origin in the head to its terminals within the gland in the thoracic segments.Nerve 7B was recorded chronically in freely moving locusts. Both salivary neurones are active during and shortly before feeding, as defined by continuous rhythmic activity of the mandibular closer muscle (M9). The activity of the salivary neurones, particularly that of SN2, thus resembles that of the satellite neurones as described recently. While SN2 ceases firing at the end of a feeding bout, SN1 continues firing for a short period. Also, SN1 fires short bursts of impulses for a few minutes following the end of a feeding bout. Similar bursts also occur at random intervals during the long-lasting phases between feeding events.Abbreviations SN1 salivary neurone 1 - SN2 salivary neurone 2 - M9 mandibular closer muscle - DUM dorsal unpaired median - LMN labral median nerve  相似文献   

2.
Summary Three antisera were used to study the distribution and anatomy of bovine pancreatic polypeptide (BPP)-like/FMRFamide-like immunoreactive neurones within the unfused abdominal ganglia of the migratory locust, Locusta migratoria. All the antisera used stained two or more clusters of perikarya, localized anteriorly and posteriorly near the midline within each unfused abdominal ganglion. Double labelling experiments with intracellular dye injection, or differential backfilling, combined with subsequent immunostaining were carried out to identify these neurones. Two of the antisera (antisera 1 and 2, both raised against FMRFamide) stained three groups of midline neurones, located anterior dorsal, anterior ventral and posterior dorsal within the ganglion. Neurones of the former of these two clusters projected via the anterior median nerve to a neurohaemal organ. The posterior cluster of midline cells comprised immunopositive perikarya all but one of which also projected via the anterior median nerve to innervate the neurohaemal organ. Double labelling with Lucifer yellow and antisera 1 and 2 showed that the remaining neurone was the previously identified doral unpaired median (DUM)heart1 neurone. The third antiserum (AK141), also raised against FMRFamide, stained neurones within an anterior dorsal cluster, and in a posterior cluster. Double labelling with differential Co2+/Ni2+-backfilling and the antiserum 3 (AK141) demonstrated that the large neurones of both clusters belonged to the population of bilaterally projecting neurones (BPNs), including the DUMheart1 neurone. Since the antisera cross-react with BPP and fail to label neurones when preadsorped with BPP or FMRFamide, we conclude that the labelled neurones contain polypeptides of the FMRFamide/BPP-family.  相似文献   

3.
The innervation of each of the muscles involved in mediating head movement in the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria is described in detail. The number of motor neurones to each muscle and the neutral pathway and ganglion of origin of each are deduced from both histological and electrophysiological evidence. Only two of the muscles are, on histological evidence, innervated by as few as four different neurones, while several receive more than ten, and one at least 13. Individual muscles are shown physiologically to receive, in a few cases, as many as six different motor neurones. At least six muscles are innervated by motor neurones originating in more than one ganglion. One group of four muscles consisting in total of less than 100 muscle fibres receives more than 20 different motor neurones from three different ganglia through three or four different nerve roots. In these muscles, many single muscle fibres receive innervation from at least two different ganglia. It is concluded that the segmental nature of an insect muscle can not be deduced solely from a knowledge of the ganglion of origin of the motor innervation to that muscle. The innervation patterns that exist today must reflect past evolutionary development, but changes in the peripheral distribution of motor neurones, or migration of motor neurone cell bodies from one ganglion to another, or the development of additional motor neurones, or several of these factors together, must have formed a part of that development.  相似文献   

4.
—The presence of serotonin and different amino acids was investigated in the ganglia and in isolated giant neurones of Aplysia dactylomela. With a few exceptions the pattern of substances was similar in all the ganglia. Of the many identified neurones studied only one giant neurone located in each cerebral ganglion was found to contain serotonin. GABA was detected in most extracts, including those of the serotonin-containing neurone, known cholinergic, and known neurosecretory neurones. Putrescine, recently detected in extracts of nervous tissue and isolated neurones of Helix, was not detected in Aplysia nervous tissue.  相似文献   

5.
1. The following four giant neurones were identified on the dorsal surface of the left buccal ganglion of an African giant snail (Achatina fulica Ferussac): d-LBAN (dorsal-left buccal anterior neurone), d-LBMN (dorsal-left buccal medial neurone), d-LBCN (dorsal-left buccal central neurone) and d-LBPN (dorsal-left buccal posterior neurone). The axonal pathways of the neurones were studied by the intracellular injection of Lucifer Yellow; their pharmacological characteristics with respect to common putative neurotransmitters were also investigated.2. The axonal pathways of d-LBAN and d-LBCN were simple, innervating some left lateral buccal nerves or the left accessory connective buccal nerve. On the other hand, those of d-LBMN and d-LBPN were much more widespread, projecting not only to the left buccal nerves, but also to the right buccal nerves through the buccal commissure.3. No direct axonal pathway from any of the four buccal neurones tested to the other ganglioncomplexes through the cerebral buccal connectives was demonstrated.4. The pharmacological characteristics of the four neurones tested were not identical. Only 5-hydroxytryptamine excited all of the neurones, whereas dopamine, l-epinephrine and acetylcholine inhibited all of them. However, the other effective substances, such as dl-octopamine, GABA, l-homocysteic acid, erythro-β-hydroxy-l-glutamic acid and histamine, were either excitatory or inhibitory according to the neurone.  相似文献   

6.
Simultaneous Recording of Input and Output of Lateral Geniculate Neurones   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
TO understand the way in which the cat dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) processes visual information it would be useful to know the number and type of retinal inputs to individual LGN neurones. Using electrical stimulation of the optic nerve Bishop et al.1concluded that an impulse in a single optic nerve fibre is sufficient to excite a single LGN neurone. From the appearance of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) recorded essentially intracellularly, Creutzfeldt suggested that LGN neurones are driven by perhaps one2 or a few3 retinal ganglion cells. Hubel and Wiesel4 proposed models of convergence of several retinal inputs on single LGN neurones based on analyses of receptive fields. Guillery5 produced anatomical evidence that some types of LGN neurones receive inputs from several different retinal fibres. Now we report direct observations which were made by recording simultaneously from single LGN neurones and from individual retinal ganglion cells which provided excitatory input to them. We shall not consider inhibitory influences, which are currently under study.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The thoracic homologue of the abdominal segmental giant neurone of crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus is identified and described. It has a small cell body located in the anterior ventro-lateral quadrant of the ganglion and a large neuropil arborization, with dendrites aligned along the tracts of the giant fibres. The SG axon exits the ganglion within the major root which innervates the leg, usually in the anterior region of this root. Within 1–2 mm of the ganglion the axon terminates in a mass of fine branches, apparently randomly located within the base of the root.The SG receives suprathreshold input from the ipsilateral MG and LG fibres through rectifying electrical synapses. It makes output to FF motor neurones, also through electrical synapses. The SG also makes output to at least one corollary discharge interneurone. The SG receives depolarizing inhibitory synaptic potentials which can prevent its activation by the GFs. Some but not all of these synaptic potentials are common to similar potentials occurring in a large leg promotor motor neurone.Abbreviations AC anterior connective - GF giant fibre - IPSP inhibitory post-synaptic potential - LG lateral giant fibre - MG medial giant fibre - MoG motor giant neurone - PC posterior connective - PMM promotor motor neurone - r1 first root - r3 third root - rAD anterior distal root - rPD posterior distal root - rPM promotor muscle root - SG segmental giant neurone  相似文献   

8.
The expression of both swimmeret and postural motor patterns in crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus) were affected by stimulation of a second root of a thoracic ganglion. The response of the swimmeret system depended on the state of the postural system. In most cases, the response of the swimmeret system outlasted the stimulus.Stimulation of a thoracic second root also elicited coordinated responses from the postural system, that outlasted the stimulus. In different preparations, either the flexor excitor motor neurones or the extensor excitor motor neurones were excited by this stimulation. In every case, excitation of one set of motor neurones was accompanied by inhibition of that group's functional antagonists.This stimulation seemed to coordinate the activity of both systems; when stimulation inhibited the flexor motor neurones, then the extensor motor neurones and the swimmeret system were excited. When stimulation excited the flexor motor neurones, then the extensor motor neurones and the swimmeret system were inhibited.Two classes of interneurones that responded to stimulation of a thoracic second root were encountered in the first abdominal ganglion. These interneurones could be the pathway that coordinates the response of the postural and swimmeret systems to stimulation of a thoracic second root.Abbreviations TSR thoracic second root - epsp excitatory post-synaptic potential - ipsp inhibitory post-synaptic potential - EJP excitatory jonctional potential - PS power-stroke - RS return-stroke - INT interneurone - N1 first segmental nerve - N2 second segmental nerve - N3 third segmental nerve - A1 abdominal ganglion 1  相似文献   

9.
In honeybees (Apis mellifera), the biogenic amine octopamine has been shown to play a role in associative and non-associative learning and in the division of labour in the hive. Immunohistochemical studies indicate that the ventral unpaired median (VUM) neurones in the suboesophageal ganglion (SOG) are putatively octopaminergic and therefore might be involved in the octopaminergic modulation of behaviour. In contrast to our knowledge about the behavioural effects of octopamine, only one neurone (VUMmx1) has been related to a behavioural effect (the reward function during olfactory learning). In this study, we have investigated suboesophageal VUM neurones with fluorescent dye-tracing techniques and intracellular recordings combined with intracellular staining. Ten different VUM neurones have been found including six VUM neurones innervating neuropile regions of the brain and the SOG exclusively (central VUM neurones) and four VUM neurones with axons in peripheral nerves (peripheral VUM neurones). The central VUM neurones innervate the antennal lobes, the protocerebral lobes (including the lateral horn) and the mushroom body calyces. Of these, a novel mandibular VUM neurone, VUMmd1, exhibits the same branching pattern in the brain as VUMmx1 and responds to sucrose and odours in a similar way. The peripheral VUM neurones innervate the antennal and the mandibular nerves. In addition, we describe one labial unpaired median neurone with a dorsal cell body, DUMlb1. The possible homology between the honeybee VUM neurones and the unpaired median neurones in other insects is discussed. This work was supported by the DFG ME 365/24-2.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Intracellular microelectrode recording and ionophoretic application of carbamylcholine (CCh) were used to compare the cholinergic sensitivity of postsynaptic dendrites of an identified neurone with that of an identified presynaptic cholinergic axon.The axon of the lateral filiform hair sensory neurone (LFHSN) in the first-instar cockroachPeriplaneta americana was found to be as sensitive to CCh as the dendritic regions of giant interneurone 3 (GI 3). The CCh response of both neurones was unaffected by replacing Ca2+ with Mg2+, confirming that the ACh receptors are present on the neurones under test. The CCh response of both neurones was mimicked by ionophoretic application of nicotine. The responses were blocked by 10–5 M mecamylamine and 10–6 M d-tubocurarine and were not affected by muscarinic antagonists, suggesting that the ACh receptors present on GI 3 and LFHSN are predominantly nicotinic.The muscarinic agonist oxotremorine and the antagonists atropine and quinuclidinyl benzilate had no modulatory effect on LFHSN-GI 3 synaptic transmission.The latency of the LFHSN response to CCh was consistent with the hypothesis that ACh receptors are situated on the main axon/terminal within the neuropil of the ganglion. It has previously been shown that this region of the axon does not form output synapses (Blagburn et al. 1985a). This indirect evidence indicates that presynaptic or extrasynaptic ACh receptors are present in the membrane of a cholinergic axon.LFHSN was depolarized by synaptically-released ACh after normal or evoked spike bursts, suggesting that the nicotinic ACh receptors act as autoreceptors. However, it was not possible to obtain direct evidence to support the hypothesis that these receptors modulate ACh release.Abbreviations CCh carbamylcholine - GI giant interneurone - FHSN filiform hair sensory neurone - LFHSN lateral filiform hair sensory neurone - R in input resistance - V depolarization - V m resting potential  相似文献   

11.
In vitro experiments were performed in order to determine whether nerve stimulation would affect the RNA metabolism of an identified giant neurone (R2) in the abdominal ganglion of Aplysia californica. The electrophysiological activity of the neurone was continuously monitored with an intra- or extracellular microelectrode. The mere presence of an intracellular microelectrode inside the neurone had no significant effect on the incorporation of tritiated nucleosides into the RNA of the giant neurone. Prolonged electrical stimulation of ganglionic nerves, strong enough to elicit post-synaptic spikes in the giant neurone, produced a marked increase in the amount of labelled RNA in the nucleus as well as in the cytoplasm. Electrophoresis studies suggested that this increase in labelling might concern RNA with molecular weights corresponding to ribosomal as well as to non-ribosomal RNA.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The salivary glands of the locustSchistocerca gregaria are influenced by at least two nerves. The suboesophageal salivary nerve (nerve 7b) is excitatory eliciting copious secretion when active. The prothoracic posterior transverse nerve is also capable of evoking increases in secretion, but only if the innervation from the salivary nerve is present. This is, in part, because activity in the transverse nerve influences the firing of the two suboesophageal salivary neurones that have their axons in the salivary nerve. The effect of the salivary nerve is mimicked by both 5-HT and dopamine, whereas the action of the transverse nerve on the glands is mimicked by the peptides YGGFMRFamide and YGGFLRFamide.Abbreviations 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine - cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate - SN salivary neurone - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography  相似文献   

13.
Summary Chick embryo lumbar sympathetic ganglia (11 day) cultured for three days and uncultured (in vivo) ganglia of comparable age were freeze-dried and processed by the formaldehyde-induced fluorescence technique for the demonstration of biogenic monoamines. The catecholamine levels within principal neurone cell bodies and small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells were then examined in plastic sections of the in vivo and in vitro ganglia by a quantitative fluorescence method under various experimental conditions. Culture of ganglia for three days in the presence of hydrocortisone acetate (10g/ml) resulted in an increased SIF cell fluorescence (P<0.001 compared to control) and a green to yellow colour shift in the fluorophore of SIF cells. No detectable alteration in the fluorescence level of neurones was observed. When neurones after three days in culture were incubated for 1 h in exogenous catecholamines, a significant increase in fluorescence levels (interpreted as an increase in catecholamine content) occurred with noradrenaline (2×10–6 M; 2×10–5 M). SIF cells in ganglia removed directly from 14-day old chicks similarly took up noradrenaline and dopamine, and also adrenaline (2×10–5 M). Morphological results are presented which indicate that the cellular appearances and architecture of cultured ganglion explants are very similar to those in comparable ganglia in vivo.This work was supported by a grant from the Medical Research Council. We thank Mrs. G. O'Shea, Mr. T.T. Lee and Mr. P.F. Hire for their valuable technical assistance  相似文献   

14.
Summary Fluorescence microscopical studies with the procedure of Falck and Hillarp have confirmed previous observations concerning the appearance of neurones with green and yellow specific fluorescence in the central and peripheral nervous system ofLumbricus terrestris.Chemical estimates show that the fluorescent neurones contain the primary catecholamines dopamine and noradrenaline, in addition to an indolamine, presumably 5-hydroxytryptamine. Rude's opinion that dopamine is present in a concentration twice that of noradrenaline is confirmed.Microspectrofluorometric analyses of the neurones displaying green specific fluorescence show two types of neurones, one presumably containing dopamine (mainly the receptor cells, certain small and some of the large cells in the cerebral ganglion). Some of the large cells of the cerebral ganglion and the bipolar cells near the base of the second segmental nerve in the ventral nerve cord show characteristics compatible with the simultaneous presence of both noradrenaline and dopamine in them.This work was supported by grants from the Helge Ax:son Johnson Foundation and was carried out within a reasearch organization sponsored by the Swedish Medical Research Council (projects No. B71-14X-2321-04A, B71-14X-712-06A, and B71-14X-56-07A).  相似文献   

15.
The role of non-spiking local interneurones in the synaptic interactions between abdominal extension-evoking descending interneurones and uropod motor neurones in the terminal abdominal ganglion of the crayfish Procambarus clarkii (Girard) was investigated electrophysiologically. Continuous electrical stimulation of the lateral region of the 3rd-4th abdominal connective that included abdominal extension evoking interneurones excited the opener motor neurones and inhibited the closer, reductor motor neurone. Spikes from a single descending interneurone evoked consistent and short latency (0.8–0.9 ms) excitatory postsynaptic potentials (e.p.s.ps) in the opener motor neurones, and evoked rather long-latency (1.5–2.7 ms) inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (i.p.s.ps) in the reductor motor neurone. Many non-spiking interneurones also received depolarizing p.s.ps (0.8–2.5 ms in latency) that were usually faster than i.p.s.ps of the reductor motor neurone if both neurones were recorded sequentially in the same preparation. Non-spiking interneurones received convergent inputs from several descending interneurones and made inverting connection with the reductor motor neurone. Elimination of descending inputs to a particular non-spiking interneurone could reduce the inhibitory response of the reductor motor neurone. These observations strongly suggested that descending inhibitory inputs to the closer, reductor motor neurone were mediated by non-spiking interneurones. Furthermore, some non-spiking interneurones made output connections with the opener motor neurones. The disynaptic pathway through non-spiking interneurones is significant to control and modulate the opening pattern of the uropod during abdominal extension. Accepted: 27 December 1996  相似文献   

16.
1. Repeating bursts of motor neurone impulses have been recorded from the nerves of completely isolated nerve cords of the medicinal leech. The salient features of this burst rhythm are similar to those obtained in the semi-intact preparation during swimming. Hence the basic swimming rhythm is generated by a central oscillator. 2. Quantitative comparisons between the impulse patterns obtained from the isolated nerve cord and those obtained from a semi-intact preparation show that the variation in both dorsal to ventral motor neurone phasing and burst duration with swim cycle period differ in these two preparations. 3. The increase of intersegmental delay with period, which is a prominent feature of swimming behaviour of the intact animal, is not seen in either the semi-intact or isolated cord preparations. 4. In the semi-intact preparation, stretching the body wall or depolarizing an inhibitory motor neurone changes the burst duration of excitatory motor neurones in the same segment. In the isolated nerve cord, these manipulations also change the period of the swim cycle in the entire cord. 5. These comparisons suggest that sensory input stabilizes the centrally generated swimming rhythm, determines the phasing of the bursts of impulses from dorsal and ventral motor neurones, and matches the intersegmental delay to the cycle period so as to maintain a constant body shape at all rates of swimming.  相似文献   

17.
The unusual morphology of a sound-activated plurisegmental ascending interneurone (AN5-AG7) in an insect (Ancistrura nigrovittata, Ensifera, Phaneropteridae) is described. This neurone's soma is located in the penultimate abdominal ganglion. The most prominent arborisations with smooth endings are found in the prothoracic ganglion. The neurone terminates with numerous beaded endings in the brain (protocerebrum). All abdominal ganglia including the penultimate contain only tiny side branches of beaded appearance. The neurone's morphology is compared to the morphology of a `typical' sound-activated plurisegmental neurone of bushcrickets with its soma in the prothorax. In the prothoracic ganglion and in the brain the arborisations of the two cells are very similar. Graded potentials and action potentials are generated in the prothoracic portion of both neurones. Both receive excitation mainly by ultrasound, and inhibition by soma-ipsilateral stimuli. Neither wind, substrate vibration nor touch of the abdomen evoke responses in AN5-AG7. It is assumed that early in evolution this neurone had its dendrites in the ganglion which houses the cell body (like cercal interneurones of this neuromere). Profound evolutionary changes probably have taken place to bring about this neuron's modern morphology. Accepted: 12 June 1999  相似文献   

18.
Summary The distribution patterns of serotonin-immunoreactive somata in the cerebral and subpharyngeal ganglion, and in the head and tail ganglia of the nerve cord of Lumbricus terrestris are described from whole-mount preparations. A small number of serotonin-immunoreactive neurons occurs in the cerebral ganglion, in contrast to the large population of serotonin-immunoreactive neurons that exists in all parts of the ventral nerve cord. From the arrangement of serotonin-immunoreactive somata in the subpharyngeal ganglion, we suggest that this ganglion arises from the fusion of two primordial ganglia. In head and tail ganglia, the distribution of serotonin-immunoreactive somata resembles that in midbody segments. Segmental variations in the pattern and number of serotonin-immunoreactive somata in the different body regions are discussed on the background of known developmental mechanisms that result in metameric neuronal populations in annelids and arthropods.Abbreviations CG1, CG2 cerebral soma group 1, 2 - CNS central nervous system - GINs giant interneurons - 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine, serotonin - 5-HTi 5-HT-immunoreactive - N side nerve - SG19 subpharyngeal soma group 1–9 - SN segmental nerve  相似文献   

19.
In situ hybridisation studies using a digoxigenin-labelled DNA probe encoding the Leu-callatostatin prohormone of the blowflies Calliphora vomitoria and Lucilia cuprina have revealed a variety of neurones in the brain and thoracico-abdominal ganglion, peripheral neurosecretory neurones, and endocrine cells of the midgut. With two exceptions, the hybridising cells are the same as those previously identified in immunocytochemical studies of sections and whole-mounts using Leu-callatostatin COOH-terminal-specific antisera. Within the brain and suboesophageal ganglion, there is a variety of neurones ranging from a single pair of large cells situated in the dorsal protocerebrum, to the several pairs of neurones in the tritocerebrum, some of which, in immunocytochemical preparations, can be seen to project via axons in the cervical connective to the thoracico-abdominal ganglion. In the medulla of the optic lobes, numerous small interneurones hybridise with the probe, as do clusters of similar-sized neurones close to the roots of the ocellar nerves. These results indicate that the Leu-callatostatin neuropeptides of the brain play a variety of roles in neurotransmission and neuromodulation. There are only three pairs of Leu-callatostatin-immunoreactive neurones in the thoracico-abdominal ganglion, at least two pairs of which project axons along the median abdominal nerve to provide extensive innervation of the hindgut. The Leu-callatostatin peripheral neurosecretory cells are located in close association with both nerve and muscle fibres in the thorax. In addition to neuronal Leu-callatostatin, the presence of the peptide and its mRNA has been demonstrated in endocrine cells in the posterior part of the midgut. These observations provide an example of a named brain/gut peptide in an insect.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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