Evidence for octopaminergic modulation of an insect visceral muscle
- 1 May 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neurobiology
- Vol. 16 (3) , 171-181
- https://doi.org/10.1002/neu.480160303
Abstract
Two dorsal unpaired median neurons (DUMOV1 and DUMOV2) lying in the posterior region of the VIIth abdominal ganglion of Locusta migratoria have axons which project to the muscles of the oviducts. This study reports the presence of octopamine within isolated DUMOV cell bodies, as well as in the oviducal nerve and innervated oviducal muscle. Individual cell bodies were pooled and found to contain about 0.34 pmol of octopamine per cell body giving an approximate value of 1.27 mM octopamine. Octopamine is concentrated within the area of oviducal muscle which receives DUMOV axons.Pharmacological studies reveal that the amplitude of neurally‐evoked contractions of the oviducal muscle is reduced in a dose‐dependent manner by octopamine, with threshold lying between 5 × 10−10 M and 7 × 10−9M. The receptors for this response show a specificity for octopamine and synephrine, with an order of potency being octopamine = synephrine > metanephrine > tyramine > dopamine.The presence of octopamine throughout this neural pathway, coupled with the demonstration of octopaminergic modulation of muscular contraction, supports the hypothesis that octopamine serves a physiological role in this visceral system.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
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