Sensory Projections from Ectopic Appendages in an insect: Inherent Specificity and Influence of Location |
| |
Authors: | P Sivasubramanian D R Nässel |
| |
Institution: | Department of Biology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Bruswick, Canada E3B 6E1;Department of Zoology, University of Stockholm, Svante Arrhenius väg 16. S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden |
| |
Abstract: | Peripheral and central pathfinding by sensory axons from appendages was investigated in the fly Sarcophaga bullata . (a) Supernumerary appendages (haltere, wing, antenna and leg) were produced by imaginal disc transplantation at various ectopic sites, (b) Leg neuropil was deafferented by leg disc extirpation and in its place another leg disc was implanted. (c) The basal stalk of a leg disc connecting it with the thoracic ganglion was transected. Using cobalt chloride and HRP backfilling methods the pathways taken by the afferents from these experimentally altered appendages was examined. The results indicate that the larval nerves and the imaginal disc stalks act as guides for growing axons to locate their correct entry sites within the ventral ganglion. In the absence of these guides the axons follow any peripheral nerve, such as abdominal nerve, and enter the ganglion at inappropriate sites. However, within the ganglion they take particular routes, almost identical to those taken by axons from in situ appendages suggesting the existance of some kind of a labelled pathway. Deafferentation does not make the leg neuropil more attractive to ingrowing ectopic sensory axons. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|