Abstract
AbstractThe corpora allata (CA) are essential endocrine organs that biosynthesize and secrete the sesquiterpenoid hormone, namely juvenile hormone (JH), to regulate a wide variety of developmental and physiological events in insects. Previous studies had demonstrated that the CA are directly innervated with neurons in many insect species, implying the innervations to be important for regulating JH biosynthesis in response to internal physiology and external environments. While this is also true for the model organism,Drosophila melanogaster, which neurotransmitters are produced in the CA-projecting neurons are yet to be clarified. In this study onD. melanogaster, we aimed to demonstrate that a subset of neurons producing the neuropeptide hugin, the invertebrate counterpart of the vertebrate neuromedin U, directly projects to the adult CA. A synaptic vesicle marker in the hugin neurons was observed at their axon termini located on the CA, which were immunolabeled with a newly-generated antibody to the JH biosynthesis enzyme JH acidO-methyltransferase (JHAMT). We also found the CA-projecting hugin neurons to likely express a gene encoding the specific receptor for diuretic hormone 44 (Dh44). Moreover, our data suggested that the CA-projecting hugin neurons have synaptic connections with the upstream neurons producing Dh44. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to identify a specific neurotransmitter of the CA-projecting neurons inD. melanogaster, and to anatomically characterize a neuronal pathway of the CA-projecting neurons and their upstream neurons.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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