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The oviduct musculature of the horsefly, Tabanus sulcifrons, and its response to 5-hydroxytryptamine and proctolin
Authors:BENJAMIN J. COOK  SHIRLEE MEOLA
Affiliation:Veterinary Toxicology and Entomology Research Laboratory, Federal Research-Science and Education Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture, College Station, Texas, U.S.A.
Abstract:ABSTRACT. A delicate lace-like membrane covers the ovaries of Tabanus sulcifrons. These membranes were found to contain muscle fibres that provide the organs with motile properties. The lateral oviducts consist of a single layer of longitudinal muscles that form a structural syncytium by means of an extensive anastomosis of the fibres comprising it. The common oviduct is composed of two muscle layers, an outer sheath of circular muscle and an inner substratum of longitudinal muscle. Both of these layers showed evidence of a structural syncytium. When isolated in saline, the oviduct was spontaneously active and gave a simple phasic pattern of contraction. Such muscle preparations were sensitive to both 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT) and the insect myotropic peptide, proctolin. Excitation was generally indicated by a rise in muscle tonus or an increase in the frequency and amplitude of individual phasic contractions, or all three characteristics. The threshold for activation with 5HT was variable, ranging from as low as 4 × 10-9M to 1 × 10-7M. Proctolin evoked a noticeable increase in the tonus of most oviducts at 10-10M. However, several preparations responded to as little as 3 × 10-11M proctolin.
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