Immunocytochemistry of dopamine in the brain of the locust Schistocerca gregaria

Abstract
Catecholamine‐induced histofluorescence studies have suggested a rich innervation of the locust brain by dopamine‐containing neurons. To provide a basis for future studies on dopamine action in this insect, the location and morphology of neurons reacting with antisera against dopamine were investigated in the supraoesophageal ganglion of the locust, Schistocerca gregaria. In each brain hemisphere, about 100 interneurons in the midbrain and approximately 3,000 cells in the optic lobe show dopamine‐like immunoreactivity. All major areas of the brain except the calyces of the mushroom body, the antennal lobe, large parts of the lobula, and some areas in the inferior lateral protocerebrum contain immunoreactive neuronal processes. The arborization patterns of most dopamine‐immunoreactive cell types could be identified through detailed reconstructions. The central body exhibits the most intense immunostaining. It is innervated by at least 40 pairs of dopamine‐immunoreactive neurons belonging to three different cell types. Additional arborizations of these neurons are in the superior protocerebrum and in the lateral accessory lobes. A group of 4 immunoreactive neurons with ramifications in the antennal mechanosensory and motor center gives rise to a dense meshwork of varicose fibers in the pedunculus and parts of the α‐ and β‐lobes of the mushroom body. Other cell types innervate the ventrolateral protocerebrum, the inferior protocerebrum and the posterior optic tubercles. Three descending neurons originating in the tritocerebrum exhibit dopamine‐like immunoreactivity. In the optic lobe, about 3,000 columnar intrinsic neurons of the medulla and a group of centrifugal tangential cells with arborizations in the medulla and lamina are dopamine‐immunoreactive. The study extends previous histofluorescent investigations on the distribution of catecholamines in the locust brain and suggests homologies among dopamine‐immunoreactive cell groups in locusts, bees, and flies.

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