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Cell Tissue Res


Title:Distribution of acetylcholinesterase activity in the deutocerebrum of the sphinx moth Manduca sexta
Author(s):Homberg U; Hoskins SG; Hildebrand JG;
Address:"Institut fur Zoologie, Universitat Regensburg, Germany"
Journal Title:Cell Tissue Res
Year:1995
Volume:279
Issue:2
Page Number:249 - 259
DOI: 10.1007/BF00318481
ISSN/ISBN:0302-766X (Print) 0302-766X (Linking)
Abstract:"We have used a cytochemical technique to investigate the distribution of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in the deutocerebrum of the brain of the sphinx moth Manduca sexta. To distinguish between extra- and intracellular pools of the enzyme, some brains were treated prior to histochemical staining with echothiophate, an irreversible AChE inhibitor which penetrates cell membranes very slowly and, therefore, inhibits only extracellular AChE. In the antennal nerve, fascicles of presumably mechanosensory fibers show echothiophate-insensitive AChE activity. They bypass the antennal lobe and project to the antennal mechanosensory and motor center of the deutocerebrum. In the antennal lobe, fibers in the coarse neuropil, cell bodies in the lateral cell group, and all glomeruli exhibit AChE activity. In most ordinary glomeruli, echothiophate-sensitive AChE activity is concentrated in the outer cap regions, corresponding to the terminal arborizations of olfactory afferents. A previously unrecognized glomerulus in the ventro-median antennal lobe shows uniform and more intense AChE-specific staining that the other glomeruli. No AChE activity appeared to be associated with male-specific pheromone-sensitive afferents in the macroglomerular complex. About 67 interneurons with somata in the lateral cell group of the antennal lobe show echothiophate-insensitive AChE activity. These neurons seem to be members of two types of antennal-lobe projection neurons with fibers passing through the outer-antennocerebral tract to the protocerebrum. AChE-stained arborizations of these neurons appear to invade all glomeruli, including three distinguishable subunits of the male-specific macroglomerular complex. In echothiophate-treated animals, the projections of one of these types of fiber form large terminals in the lateral horn of protocerebrum, which partly protrude into the adjacent glial cell layer. The results suggest that extracellularly accessible AChE is associated with ordinary olfactory receptor terminals but apparently not with pheromone-sensitive afferents. Intracellular AChE appears to be present in antennal mechanosensory fibers and in two types of olfactory projection neurons of the antennal lobe. The study provides further evidence for cholinergic neurotransmission of most antennal afferents. The AChE-containing interneurons might be cholinergic as well or use the enzyme for functions unrelated to hydrolysis of acetylcholine"
Keywords:Acetylcholine/*physiology Acetylcholinesterase/*analysis Animals Brain/*ultrastructure *Brain Chemistry Echothiophate Iodide/pharmacology Interneurons/enzymology/ultrastructure Male Manduca/*enzymology/ultrastructure Mechanoreceptors Nerve Tissue Proteins;
Notes:"MedlineHomberg, U Hoskins, S G Hildebrand, J G eng AI-23253/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/ Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. Germany 1995/02/01 Cell Tissue Res. 1995 Feb; 279(2):249-59. doi: 10.1007/BF00318481"

 
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