The topography and neuroanatomy of fibers connecting the deutocerebrum to the protocerebrum in the brain of the American cockroach Periplaneta americana were investigated by staining single or multiple deutocerebral neurons with cobalt, Lucifer Yellow, or biocytin. Five tracts are distinguished on the basis of their routes from origins in the antennal lobe to the protocerebral neuropil: the inner antenno-cerebral tract (IACT); antenno-cerebral tracts II, III, and IV (ACT II, III, IV), and the outer antenno-cerebral tract (OACT). These tracts are largely composed of the axons of four classes of deutocerebral projection neurons, which have been identified morphologically; the neuronal arborizations in the glomeruli of the antennal lobe and in the protocerebral projection regions have been examined. Projection neurons with processes in the inner antenno-cerebral tract and in the antenno-cerebral tract II each innervate a single glomerulus in the antennal lobe, and both types have terminals in the calyces of the mushroom bodies and in the lateral lobe of the protocerebrum. The axons of pheromone-sensitive projection neurons with dendritic trees in the male-specific macroglomerulus seem to run exclusively in the inner antenno-cerebral tract. Subgroups of these pheromone sensitive neurons differ in relative sensitivity to the two female attractant components as well as in the arborization pattern of their dendrites in the macroglomerulus. The projection neurons of two other classes each innervate many glomeruli in the antennal lobe, those of one class sending their axons into the protocerebrum in the antenno-cerebral tract IV and the other, in the outer antenno-cerebral tract. The neurons of antenno-cerebral tract IV innervate not only the mushroom body calyces and the lateral lobe but also neuropil regions not previously described in the cockroach. Neurons with axons in the outer antenno-cerebral tract have no terminals in the calyces but innervate the lateral lobe and the neuropil surrounding the tract. The morphological findings presented here show that, in addition to the tracts previously documented in the cockroach brain, there are other, presumably olfactory, connections between the deutocerebrum and the protocerebrum.
Many insects possess a highly developed sense of smell. This paper summarizes the cellular and synaptic organization of the antennal (olfactory) lobe of the insect brain and then reviews morphological and fine-structural aspects of the development of the lobe. Visualization of synapses between classes of neurons identified by physiological, morphological, or transmitter-cytochemical properties has provided insights into arrangements of contacts and their possible roles in information processing. Studies of development have revealed the requirement for afferent axons from the antenna for the formation of olfactory glomeruli, where virtually all of the synapses in the lobe occur, and have suggested the possibility that glial cells play a role in the instructive influence of the axons on their target neurons in the lobe. The findings reviewed in this paper are primarily from one representative hemimetabolous insect, the American cockroach, and one representative holometabolous insect, a hawkmoth, and comparisons are made with vertebrate systems when appropriate.
Behavioural responses of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes to ammonia were investigated in a modified Y-tube olfactometer. Ammonia was attractive in concentrations from 17 ppb to 17 ppm in air when presented together with lactic acid. Aqueous solutions of ammonia salts in concentrations comparable to those found in human sweat also increased the attractiveness of lactic acid. The role of lactic acid as an essential synergist for ammonia became further apparent by the fact that ammonia alone or in combination with carbon dioxide was not effective, even though the synergistic effect of carbon dioxide and lactic acid was corroborated. An extract from human skin residues, which attracts approximately 80% of the tested mosquitoes, contains both lactic acid and ammonia. The combination of these compounds, however, attracts no more than 45%, indicating that other components on human skin also play a role in host finding. Preparative liquid chromatography of the skin extract yielded three behaviourally active fractions which work together synergistically. Fraction III contains lactic acid as the effective principle; the compositions of the other two have not been clarified yet. The attractiveness of fraction I was augmented considerably when ammonia was added, whereas the effect of fraction II was not influenced by ammonia. These results suggests that ammonia is part of the effective principle of fraction II and contributes to the attractive effect of host odours.
Single carbon to 18 carbon n-aliphatic carboxylic acids were tested for their attractive effects on female Aedes aegypti in a Y-tube olfactometer. Each acid was tested over a wide range of concentrations together with L-(+)-lactic acid, the indispensable synergist for other attractive components emitted from human hosts. The attractiveness of lactic acid was significantly augmented when combined with fatty acids of chain length C(1)-C(3), C(5)-C(8) and C(13)-C(18), respectively. The addition of the C(9) and C(11) acids reduced the attractive effect of lactic acid. According to experiments showing a further increase of attractiveness by adding a second fatty acid, we suggest two groups of attractive carboxylic acids: C(1)-C(3) and C(5)-C(8). The addition of a fatty acid from one group to a mixture of lactic acid and an acid from the other group augmented the attraction to the mixture. Together with ammonia, a previously demonstrated attractant for Aedes aegypti, lactic acid plus two fatty acids from the different groups formed the hitherto most attractive, artificially composed blend. Two of the carboxylic acids which were found to be attractive together with lactic acid were also tested alone and in combination with CO(2), the major attractant in human breath. In both cases no attractive effect of the carboxylic acids could be observed.
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