Elsevier

Journal of Insect Physiology

Volume 20, Issue 4, April 1974, Pages 669-675, 677-678
Journal of Insect Physiology

Neurosecretory cells in the frontal ganglion of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta

https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-1910(74)90189-9Get rights and content

Abstract

The frontal ganglion of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta (L.), was found to contain two neurosecretory (NS) cells (max dia = 40–45 μm). The cytoplasmic inclusions of the NS cells were stained purple with paraldehyde fuchsin, and marked fluctuations in amounts of NS material in the perikarya were observed, depending upon the developmental status of the insect. The perikarya of NS cells in the frontal ganglia of starved larvae and diapause pupae contained large accumulations of NS material, whereas feeding larvae and developing pharate adults showed relatively low amounts of neurosecretion. Electron microscopy revealed large accumulations of NS granules (dia = 80–240 nm) in the frontal ganglia of diapause pupae, but only slight accumulations of granules were seen in the NS cells of developing larvae and pharate adults.

It was concluded that axonal transport and release but not synthesis is shut down during starvation and diapause, leading to accumulation of NS material in the perikarya. It is also suggested that the failure of many investigators to differentiate NS cells in the frontal ganglion of various insects may have been due to the selection of very active stages when the amount of available NS material was too low to be visualized by conventional staining techniques.

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