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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-234X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary InLumbricus terrestris the wall of the pharynx is built up from obliquely striated longitudinal and circular muscle layers. The occurrence of perikarya and nerve bundles showing green fluorescence suggests the presence of aminergic innervation in the pharynx. A significant number of chemical synapses were detected in the neuropil among axon terminals. The junctional gap is generally 100–300 nm wide in type I junctions which resemble the cholinergic motor endplates of vertebrate skeletal muscle. A narrow junctional gap of about 25 nm is characteristic of the “close contacts” in the type II neuromuscular junction. Agranular spherical vesicles, together with small and large dense-cored granules, fill in these axon terminals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Key words: Octopamine ; Nervous system ; central ; Immunocytochemistry ; Lumbricus terrestris (Annelida) ; Eisenia fetida (Annelida)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. The distribution of octopamine (OA)-like immunoreactive neurons was investigated, and the concentration of OA was assayed by high-performance liquid chromatography in the central nervous system of Oligochaeta species, Lumbricus terrestris, Eisenia fetida, and Lumbricus polyphemus. OA-like immunoreactive nerve cells were found in all parts of the central nervous system; certain regions of the neuropil of the ganglia were densely innervated by immunoreactive fibers. Altogether 96–102 OA-like immunoreactive neurons were detected in the cerebral ganglion, 18 in the subesophageal ganglion, and 14 in the segmental ganglia of 2nd–5th and 40th–45th body segments of Lumbricus terrestris; the relevant numbers of neurons in Eisenia were 88–98, 20–22, and 6, respectively. The sizes of OA immunoreactive-like cells showed great variability according to their anatomical localization. High-performance liquid chromatography assay revealed the presence of OA in each investigated part of the central nervous system, showing concentration values between 8.6 and 16.7 pmol/mg wet weight in the three species. The concentration of the OA precursor tyramine was significantly lower in the central nervous system of Eisenia (〈0.5 pmol/mg wet weight) than in that of both Lumbricus species (0.67–2.0 pmol/mg wet weight). The metabolism of 3H-tyrosine revealed that tyramine and OA were synthesized by the enzymes tyrosine-decarboxylase and tyramine-β-hydroxylase, respectively. Thus, OA appears to have a regulatory role in the central nervous system of Oligochaeta.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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