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1.
Exercise and digestive processes are known to elevate the metabolic rate of organisms independently. In this study, the effects of simultaneous exercise and digestion were examined in the graceful crab Cancer gracilis. This species exhibited resting oxygen uptake levels between 29 and 42 mg O(2) kg(-1) h(-1). In postprandial crabs, oxygen uptake was approximately double that of unfed crabs. During exercise, oxygen uptake increased three- to fourfold, reaching maximal levels of more than 130 mg O(2) kg(-1 ) h(-1). However, there was no difference in oxygen uptake during activity between unfed and postprandial animals. There was also no difference in exercise endurance levels between unfed and postprandial animals; both sets of animals were unable to right themselves after being turned on their backs, reaching exhaustion after 13-15 attempts. To determine whether increased activity affected gastric processes, the passage of a meal through the digestive system was followed using a fluoroscope. Passage of digesta through the gut system was slower in active animals than in resting crabs. Resting crabs cleared the foregut after approximately 18 h, which was significantly faster than the 34.5 h for constantly active animals. Likewise, the midgut region of resting animals was cleared at a faster rate than that of active animals. Because of residual amounts of digesta remaining in the hindgut, no difference in clearance rates of this section of the gut was evident. The slower clearance times of the foregut were due to a significantly slower rate of mastication of food, as evidenced by a lower cardiac stomach contraction rate. Contraction of the pyloric region of the foregut functions to move the digesta along the midgut, and there was a direct correlation between slower contraction rates of this region and the increased time of passage for digesta through the midgut of active animals. Because increased activity levels affected gastric processing, the crabs exhibited a behavioral response. During a 24-h period after feeding, there was a significant reduction in locomotor activity. The findings of this study suggest a prioritization of metabolic responses toward activity at the expense of digestion. This is discussed in relation to the ability of the crabs to balance the demands of competing physiological systems.  相似文献   

2.
Pyloric pattern-generating neurons that control the pyloric region of the foregut were identified in the stomatogastric ganglion of the most primitive decapod genus Penaeus. Five types of motor neurons and one interneuron are involved in generation of pyloric motor pattern. One cell type of motor neurons innervates muscles of both the gastric mill and the pylorus like the gastric motor neurons in Cancer, but unlike those in Panulirus. These identified neurons are connected to each other either by electrical or inhibitory chemical synapses to construct the neural circuit. This pyloric circuit is similar to the homologous circuit of other crustacean species though some differences are seen in synaptic connections, supporting the hypothesis that the basic design of the neural circuit has been conserved during evolution of the Malacostraca, and that differences have occurred in the synaptic connectivity as the foregut structure has become complex. The motor neurons use either acetylcholine or glutamate as a neurotransmitter like in reptantians. The foregut structure, the number of the pyloric cells, muscle innervation, neurotransmitters, and circuitry are compared among malacostracan crustaceans to provide insight into how the neural circuits change and evolve to produce the motor patterns mediating behaviour. Accepted: 18 April 1997  相似文献   

3.
The passage of a radio-opaque meal was followed through the digestive system of the red rock crab, Cancer productus, using a fluoroscope. When the crabs were maintained in seawater, the food was apparent in the foregut as soon as the animals had fed. Release of food from the foregut was routinely slow and digesta appeared in the midgut only in small amounts at any one time. The foregut was emptied between 24 and 36 h, digesta was cleared from the midgut region at 36 h and by 48 h only a small amount of residual digesta was left in the posterior part of the hindgut. Contractions of the cardiac region of the foregut were somewhat sporadic and ranged between 6 and 11 min-1. Contractions of the pyloric region were more stable, varying between 45-65 min-1. In both cases, there was no change in rate during 18 h period in seawater. When crabs were subjected to both short- and long-term aerial exposure, release of food from the foregut was halted for the first 4-6 h of emersion. Although, small amounts of digesta appeared in the midgut and hindgut, there was no significant change in the amount in each region during emersion. There was a trend towards a depression of cardiac stomach contraction rates, but this was only significant in 3 h postprandial crabs during short-term emersion. A pronounced decrease in pyloric stomach contraction rate was maintained for the duration of the aerial exposure. When crabs were returned to seawater, contraction rates took 3-5 h to return to normal, but no significant change in gastric evacuation was observed during this period. During re-immersion, over 65% of the animals regurgitated the stomach contents. This regurgitation may act as a protective mechanism to avoid digestion and the subsequent specific dynamic action. The decrease in gastric processing in C. productus is probably part of an overall metabolic depression occurring during emersion.  相似文献   

4.
In most invertebrates, multiple species-specific isoforms of tachykinin-related peptide (TRP) are common. In contrast, only a single conserved TRP isoform, APSGFLGMRamide, has been documented in decapod crustaceans, leading to the hypothesis that it is the sole TRP present in this arthropod order. Previous studies of crustacean TRPs have focused on neuronal tissue, but the recent demonstration of TRPs in midgut epithelial cells in Cancer species led us to question whether other TRPs are present in the gut, as is the case in insects. Using direct tissue matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry, in combination with sustained off-resonance irradiation collision-induced dissociation, we found that at least one additional TRP is present in Cancer irroratus, Cancer borealis, Cancer magister, and Cancer productus. The novel TRP isoform, TPSGFLGMRamide, was present not only in the midgut, but also in the stomatogastric nervous system (STNS). In addition, we identified an unprocessed TRP precursor APSGFLGMRG, which was detected in midgut tissues only. TRP immunohistochemistry, in combination with preadsorption studies, suggests that APSGFLGMRamide and TPSGFLGMRamide are co-localized in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG), which is contained within the STNS. Exogenous application of TPSGFLGMRamide to the STG elicited a pyloric motor pattern that was identical to that elicited by APSGFLGMRamide, whereas APSGFLGMRG did not alter the pyloric motor pattern.  相似文献   

5.
Peritrophic membranes (PTMs) are secreted acellular layers that separate ingested materials from the gut epithelium in a variety of invertebrates. In insects and crustaceans, PTMs are produced in the midgut trunk (MGT, or intestine), but the MGT in decapod crustaceans, unlike that of insects, is not involved with digestion or absorption of food. We demonstrate that the PTM in the penaeid shrimp Sicyonia ingentis is similar to that in other crustaceans that have been studied and is primarily composed of chitin. The lectin WGA binds only to the PTM and glycocalyx along the microvilli of the midgut cells, which is consistent with the suggestion that the chitin is synthesized along the microvilli. The PTM is only permeable to inert particles smaller than 20 nm. We also describe the secretion of granules, which fill the apices of the epithelial cells, into the ectoperitrophic space. Although their function is not clear, they do not contribute to the PTM.  相似文献   

6.
The study of gastrointestinal morphology, anatomy, passage rates and pH in the African giant rat, Cricetomys gambianus , were undertaken to elucidate the relationship between feeding habits and gut structure. The relatively slow transit times of digesta, suggested to be advantageous in digestion, probably resulted from a complex gastrointestinal tract. The prime function of the large papillated corpus and fornix ventriculi is thought to be starch digestion, while the caecum enhances the utilization of undigested food. Gut structure appears to be a result of a multitude of selective forces, not only dietary habits.  相似文献   

7.
The distribution of the ganglia and nerves of the stomatogastric nervous system and the innervation of the extrinsic and intrinsic muscles are described. Median unpaired frontal and hypocerebral ganglia and paired ingluvial ganglia are present. The anterior pharynx is innervated by branches of the frontal nerve and by the anterior and posterior pharyngeal nerves, originating from the frontal ganglion. The posterior pharyngeal nerves are linked to nerves innervating the posterior part of the pharynx which have their origin in the hypocerebral ganglion, the anterior portion of which has previously been regarded as part of the recurrent nerve. Paired esophageal nerves run the length of the esophagus and crop between the hypocerebral and and ingluvial ganglia, innervating the muscularis by serial side branches. From each ingluvial ganglion runs an ingluvial nerve which innervates the gizzard and a cecal nerve which innervates the midgut and its ceca. At the posterior end of the midgut there is a poorly developed nerve ring. Nerves running posteriorly from this nerve ring link the stomatogastric nervous system with the proctodeal innervation from the terminal abdominal ganglion. Multipolar peripheral neurons are present on the muscularis of the whole of the foregut, rather randomly distributed on the crop and gizzard but forming fairly definite groupings at some points on the pharynx. Though of varied appearance, these cells could not be divided into discrete morphological categories. Peripheral neurons on the midgut are of different and characteristic morphology, though a few cells of the same appearance as those of the foregut occur at the midgut-hindgut boundary. Nerve fibers on the gut almost invariably terminate on the fibers of the muscularis.  相似文献   

8.
J. E. Bron    C. Sommerville    G. H. Rae 《Journal of Zoology》1993,230(2):207-220
The functional morphology of the alimentary canal of copepodite and chalimus stages of Lepeophtheirus salmonis (Krøyer, 1837) is described and compared with that found in other copepods studied to date.
The buccal cavity passes into a gut comprising three major regions: foregut (oesophagus), midgut and hindgut. The foregut and hindgut both posscss a cuticular lining whereas the midgut is lined with specialized epithelial cells. The midgut is divided into three recognizable zones, namely anterior midgut caecum, anterior midgut and posterior midgut. Three main types of epithelial cell are recognizable in the midgut: vesicular cells, microvillous cells and basal cells which correspond to the cell types normally described in other parasitic and free-living copepod species.
Digestion is thought to occur in the midgut and be mediated by the epithelial cells that line it. Although several glands appear to discharge into the area of the buccal cavity, none was seen to interface to any other area of the gut. There was no evidence for the involvement of commensal gut bacteria in food digestion.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract. The innervation of the gut of the cockroach Leucophaea madera (F.) has been studied by means of wholemount immunocytochemistry with antisera raised against Leu-callatostatin, a cockroach allatostatin homologue identified from neuropeptide isolation and gene studies in the blowfly Calliphora vomitoria. Leu-callatostatin-imunoreactive neurones in the brain, with axon trajectories in the stomatogastric nervous system, innervate the foregut and midgut. Neurones in the last abdominal ganglion supply the hindgut and the midgut via the proctodeal nerve. In addition to a rich callatostatin-immunoreactive nerve supply, the midgut, including the midgut caeca, contain numerous callatostatin-immunoreactive endocrine cells. Physiological studies show that the spontaneous contractile activities of the foregut, but not the hindgut, are inhibited by callatostatin neuropeptides. Leu-callatostatin 3 was the most potent of the range of Leu-and Met-callatostatins tested, with a dose-dependent response between 10-13 and 10-7 M. This is similar to the results obtained with the previously identified myoinhibitory peptide of L. maderae , leucomyosuppressin. However, this peptide, with a different type of structure to the allatostatins, inhibits both foregut and hindgut motility equally. Experiments with a series of analogues of the Met-callatostatins showed that the free acid (as opposed to the carboxyamidated peptide) and N-terminally truncated peptides were inactive. These morphological and physiological results are thought to be representative of the, as yet unidentified, naturally occurring allatostatin homologues of L. maderae. This family of peptides should be added to the increasing list of insect gut myoinhibitory substances.  相似文献   

10.
Ontogeny of the gut in Penaeus setiferus was investigated by reconstruction of serial sections examined by light microscopy. Development of the gut into the adult form is protracted over several weeks beyond metamorphosis in steps that may be directly related to the unique postlarval life history of Penaeus. The gastric mill is lacking in larval stages of P. setiferus. In protozoeal stages Z1-Z3, the pyloric ampullae are blind sacs that do not communicate with the midgut. The gland filter first appears in mysis stage M2. The gastric mill in early postlarval (PL) stages consists of poorly chitinized lobes with flexible setae. By PL21 the ossicles of the gastric mill are rigid and setae are replaced by spine-like denticles, but even by PL35 the gastric mill is neither as massive nor heavily chitinized as in adults. During the mysis stages and early PL stages, the hepatopancreas communicates freely with both the foregut and the midgut trunk. By PL35 the hepatopancreatic ducts are essentially isolated from the remainder of the midgut by foregut ossicles. The midgut in Z1 consists of two pairs of simple caeca and the midgut trunk. During larval growth, each of the lateral midgut caeca develops into a number of lobes. After metamorphosis these lobes begin to ramify into small-diameter tubules, and by PL35 have completely ramified into the hepatopancreas of adults. From M1 to PL4, the anterior midgut caeca decrease in absolute size and become a single anterior diverticulum. The posterior midgut diverticulum first appears in PL21 as a simple sac and thereafter increases in size and complexity.  相似文献   

11.
The stomatogastric ganglion (STG) and the cardiac ganglion (CG) of decapod crustaceans are modulated by neuroactive substances released locally and by circulating hormones released from neuroendocrine structures including the pericardial organs (POs). Using nanoscale liquid chromatography electrospray ionization quadrupole-time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry and direct tissue matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry we have identified and sequenced a novel neuropeptide, GAHKNYLRFamide (previously misassigned as KHKNYLRFamide in a study that did not employ peptide derivatization), from the POs and/or the stomatogastric nervous system (STNS) of the crabs, Cancer borealis, Cancer productus and Cancer magister. In C. borealis, exogenous application of GAHKNYLRFamide increased the burst frequency and number of spikes per burst of the isolated CG and re-initiated bursting activity in non-bursting ganglia, effects also elicited by the FMRFamide-like peptides (FLPs) SDRNFLRFamide and TNRNFLRFamide. In the intact STNS (which contains the STG), exogenous application of GAHKNYLRFamide increased the frequency of the pyloric rhythm and activated the gastric mill rhythm, effects also similar to those elicited by SDRNFLRFamide and TNRNFLRFamide. FLP-like immunoreactivity in the POs and the STNS was abolished by pre-adsorption with the synthetic GAHKNYLRFamide. Different members of the FLP family exhibited differential degradation in the presence of extracellular peptidases. Taken collectively, the amino acid sequence of GAHKNYLRFamide, the blocking of FLP-like immunostaining, and its physiological effects on the CG and STNS suggest that this peptide is a novel member of the FLP superfamily.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Immunoreactivity against peptides of the allatostatin family having a typical YXFGL-NH2 C-terminus has been localized in different areas of the central nervous system, stomatogastric nervous system and gut of the cockroach Blattella germanica. In the protocerebrum, the most characteristic immunoreactive perikarya are situated in the lateral and median neurosecretory cell groups. Immunoreactive median neurosecretory cells send their axons around the circumesophageal connectives to form arborizations in the anterior neuropil of the tritocerebrum. A group of cells in the lateral aspect of the tritocerebrum project to the antennal lobes in the deutocerebrum, where immunoreactive arborizations can be seen in the periphery of individual glomeruli. Nerve terminals were shown in the corpora allata. These terminals come from perikarya situated in the lateral neurosecretory cells in the pars lateralis and in the subesophageal ganglion. Immunoreactive axons from median neurosecretory cells and from cells positioned in the anteriormost part of the tritocerebrum enter together in the stomatogastric nervous system and innervate foregut and midgut, especially the crop and the valve between the crop and the midgut. The hindgut is innervated by neurons whose perikarya are located in the last abdominal ganglion. Besides immunoreactivity in neurons, allatostatin-immunoreactive material is present in endocrine cells distributed within the whole midgut epithelium. Possible functions for these peptides according to their localization are discussed. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 37:269–282, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Scanning electron microscopy and immunohistochemical staining for FMRFamide-like peptides revealed that the stomatogastric nervous system of Galleria mellonella (Lepidoptera : Pyralidae) includes 5 ganglia: the frontal ganglion with 4, the hypocerebral ganglion with 2, the ingluvial ganglion with 2–4, and each of the paired proventricular ganglia with 6–8 immunoreactive perikarya. Immunoreactivity was also found in axons to and within the corpora cardiaca, in the nerves connecting stomatogastric ganglia, as well as in 8 gastric nerves that extend along longitudinal midgut muscles. Adhesion of corpora cardiaca to the hypocerebral ganglion and partial merging and shortening of gastric nerves were the only conspicuous changes of the stomatogastric system that occurred during metamorphosis.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract. I. An investigation of the effects of position of food in the gut (gut state), time since feeding, meal size and environmental temperature on the detection of prey using the electrophoretic separation of proteins with esterase activity was undertaken. The waterbug Notonecta glauca Linn (Hemiptera/Heteroptera) was used as the model predator.
2. Seven easily recognizable gut states can be identified at different times since commencement of a meal.
3. Specific prey esterase 'fingerprint' bands can be detected whilst food remains in the foregut.
4. Meal size and environmental temperature (affecting digestion and assimilation rates) both affect the rate of filling and emptying of the foregut, and hence the time period over which prey proteins can be detected by electrophoresis following a meal. Small meals and high temperatures lead to quite rapid changes in gut state with time and thus reduce the time period over which prey can be identified from gut contents (20 h). Large meals and low temperatures extend this period (48 h).
5. Predator gut state is the most important parameter in prey detectability from gut contents, and from a visual examination of the gut state it is immediately evident whether or not prey detection by electrophoresis will be possible.
6. There is further evidence in support of a twocompartment food processing model for Nofoonecru , and the significance of this type of processing in relation to gut content analysis of sucking predators is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Ths structure of the stomatogastric neuromuscular system in Panulirus argus, Callinectes sapidus and Homarus americanus has recently been described (Maynard and Dando, 1973). We attempt here to describe the sensory innervation of the foregut in Panulirus argus and, by combining this information with previous published data and less systematic observations on Callinectes and Homarus, to provide in addition a summary of the stomatogastric sensory systems in these types of Decapoda Crustacea (Figure 1, Table I).

Some anatomical problems remain unresolved and there is variation in the structure of the sense organs in different species, but we are able to recognize six major receptor groups in all of the species examined. These are (i) mechanoreceptors which monitor movements of the lower oesophagus and mouth (Receptor reference Nos. 1, 2, 3); (ii) probable chemoreceptors in the higher oesophagus and ventral cardiac sac (Rf. Nos. 6, 9, 11); (iii) cells located in or near the stomatogastric ganglion which monitor movements of the gastric mill (Rf. No. 8); (iv) neurones of the posterior stomach nerve (Rf. No. 15) which monitor movements of the gastric mill; (v) neurones innervating muscles near the cardio‐pyloric valve (Rf. No. 16); (vi) neurones innervating the hepatopancreas duct and the initial part of the intestine (Rf. Nos. 18, 19).

In such a restricted system it should be possible to determine the precise role that the various sensory systems play in the control of the simple movements of the foregut. This research must necessarily involve the investigation, with intracellular techniques, of the central events in the commissural ganglia as these ganglia appear to be the major co‐ordination centres of the stomatogastric nervous system.  相似文献   

17.
Hill SR  Orchard I 《Peptides》2003,24(10):1511-1524
The gut tissues and associated nervous system of the African migratory locust, Locusta migratoria, were found to contain FMRFamide-like immunoreactive (FLI) material throughout the five larval instars and 2 weeks into the adult stage in both males and females. FMRFamide-like immunoreactivity associated with the locust gut was described using camera lucida techniques. FMRFamide-like immunoreactivity is observed in the frontal connectives, recurrent nerve, and oesophageal nerves; projections from the ingluvial ganglion onto the anterior midgut, and from the proctodeal nerve onto the hindgut and posterior midgut; in the neuropils of the frontal ganglion, hypocerebral ganglion and ingluvial ganglia; 30 cell bodies in the frontal ganglion; multipolar sensory cells on the foregut; and endocrine-like cells in the gastric caecae and midgut. Radioimmunoassay (RIA) was used to determine the quantities of FLI material in foreguts, gastric caecae, anterior and posterior midguts, and hindgut of first-fifth instar larvae, 1-3- and 14-17-day male and female adult locusts. As expected, as the tissue size (assessed by total protein content) increases, so does the amount of FLI material in each tissue. Normalizing for tissue size reveals significant differences in FLI content among the stages for each tissue tested. Reversed phase-high pressure liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) followed by RIA has identified four groups of FLI fractions present in the gut, and different members of these groups are present in the various gut tissues.  相似文献   

18.
 Motor patterns of the cardiac sac, the gastric and the pyloric network in the stomatogastric nervous system of the shrimp Penaeus japonicus, the most primitive decapod species, were studied. Single neurons can switch from the gastric or the pyloric pattern to the cardiac sac pattern. Some of the pyloric neurons fire with the gastric pattern. All of the gastric neurons fire with the pyloric pattern, unlike those in reptantians. Proctolin activates and modulates the cardiac sac and the pyloric rhythm, and promotes reconfiguration of the networks. Neurons of the three networks have so many interconnections that they construct a multifunctional neural network like those in Cancer. This network may function in different configurations under the appropriate conditions. Several modes of interactions between the networks found in different reptantian species can apply to the penaeidean shrimp. Such interactions are general features of the stomatogastric nervous system in decapods. Phylogenetic differences among the decapod infraorders are seen in the number and orientation of muscles and the innervation pattern of muscles. The multifunctional networks have existed in the most primitive decapod species, and types of configurations of the networks would have evolved to produce a wide range of motor patterns as the foregut structure has become complex. Accepted: 26 October 1999  相似文献   

19.
The digestive tract of the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca is a straight but differentiated tube consisting of foregut, midgut, and hindgut divisions. The foregut is subdivided into a tubular esophagus, a cardiac stomach, and a pyloric stomach. The cuticular lining of the cardiac stomach is elaborated into a set of food-crushing plates and ossicles, the gastric mill, while the pyloric cuticle forms a complex straining and pressing mechanism. Nine caeca arise from the midgut, seven anteriorly and two posteriorly. Four of the anterior caeca, the hepatopancreatic caeca, are believed to be the primary sites of digestion and absorption. The remaining caeca may be absorptive, secretory, or both. The much-folded hindgut wall is capable of great distention by extrinsic muscle action for water intake to aid in flushing fecal material out of the anus; such action also may stimulate antiperistalsis by intrinsic rectal muscles.  相似文献   

20.
Microscopic anatomy of the digestive system in embryos and larvae of the terrestrial isopod crustacean Porcellio scaber was investigated by light bright field, fluorescence and electron microscopy. During marsupial ontogenetic development the event-dependent staging was used to discriminate the various embryonic stages. At the late embryo stage the differentiation of the ectodermal part of the gut into the complex filtering foregut and the hindgut with absorptive and transporting functions is accomplished. The gut of the marsupial manca larva is fully developed and similar to that of the adult. In early embryos the endodermal midgut gland primordia are filled with yolk and lipid globules. In late embryos the epithelium of paired midgut gland tubes is composed of two cell types; one of them exhibits orange autofluorescence. The endodermal cells located between the foregut and the midgut glands of late embryos form the prospective midgut. The cells have electron dense cytoplasm, abundant glycogen fields, endoplasmic reticulum, dictyosomes and numerous vesicles. In the adults the endodermal cells of the midgut remain only in the midgut gland ducts which connect the midgut glands and the foregut. Details of the cellular ultrastructure and morphogenesis of the ectodermal and endodermal parts of the digestive system during embryonic development of Porcellio scaber provide data for further phylogenetic and comparative studies in peracaridan crustaceans and other arthropods.  相似文献   

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