Localization of octopaminergic neurones in insects

This paper reviews data on the localization of octopaminergic neurones revealed by immunocytochemistry in insects, primarily the locusts Schistocerca gregaria and Locusta migratoria, cricket Gryllus bimaculatus, and cockroach Periplaneta americana. Supporting evidence for their octopaminergic nature...

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Published inComparative Biochemistry and Physiology -- Part A: Physiology Vol. 110; no. 3; pp. 203 - 215
Main Authors Stevenson, Paul Anthony, Spörhase-Eichmann, Ulrike
Format Book Review Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 1995
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Summary:This paper reviews data on the localization of octopaminergic neurones revealed by immunocytochemistry in insects, primarily the locusts Schistocerca gregaria and Locusta migratoria, cricket Gryllus bimaculatus, and cockroach Periplaneta americana. Supporting evidence for their octopaminergic nature is mentioned where available. In orthopteran ventral ganglia, the major classes of octopamine-like immunoreactive (-LI) neurones include: (1) efferent dorsal and ventral unpaired median (DUM, VUM) neurones; (2) several intersegmentally projecting DUM interneurones in the suboesophageal ganglion; other DUM interneurones are probably GABAergic; (3) a pair of anterior median cells in the prothoracic ganglion; (4) a single pair of ventral cells in most thoracic and some other ganglia; these appear to be plurisegmentally projecting interneurones. Eight categories of octopamine-LI neurones occur in the orthopteran brain. The basic projections of three types are described here: one class project to the optic lobes to form wide field projections. Another type descends to cross into the tritocerebral commissure and may invade the contralateral brain hemisphere. A further class is the median neurosecretory cells with axons in the nervi corpori cardiaci I. Available data for the honey bee Apis mellifera and moth Manduca sexta indicate that the octopamine-LI cell types found in orthopterans also occur in holometabolous insects. Immunocytochemical evidence suggests that some octopaminergic DUM cells contain an FMRFamide-related peptide and the amino acid taurine as putative cotransmitters.
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ISSN:0300-9629
DOI:10.1016/0300-9629(94)00152-J