Spelling suggestions: "subject:"antenna""
1 |
Cloning and Expression of Aquaporin in the Antennal Gland of Crayfish, Procambarus clarkiiGao, Yang 05 August 2009 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Neuronal mechanisms of odor classification in the Drosophila antennal lobe: an optical imaging studyDipt, Shubham 20 April 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
3 |
Effects of Odorant-environment Complexity on Behavioral and Neural Plasticity at Different Time ScalesJanuary 2018 (has links)
abstract: The ability to detect and appropriately respond to chemical stimuli is important for many organisms, ranging from bacteria to multicellular animals. Responses to these stimuli can be plastic over multiple time scales. In the short-term, the synaptic strengths of neurons embedded in neural circuits can be modified and result in various forms of learning. In the long-term, the overall developmental trajectory of the olfactory network can be altered and synaptic strengths can be modified on a broad scale as a direct result of long-term (chronic) stimulus experience. Over evolutionary time the olfactory system can impose selection pressures that affect the odorants used in communication networks. On short time scales, I measured the effects of repeated alarm pheromone exposure on the colony-level defense behaviors in a social bee. I found that the responses to the alarm pheromone were plastic. This suggests that there may be mechanisms that affect individual plasticity to pheromones and regulate how these individuals act in groups to coordinate nest defense. On longer time scales, I measured the behavioral and neural affects of bees given a single chronic odor experience versus bees that had a natural, more diverse olfactory experience. The central brains of bees with a deprived odor experience responded more similarly to odorants in imaging studies, and did not develop a fully mature olfactory network. Additionally, these immature networks showed behavioral deficits when recalling odor mixture components. Over evolutionary time, signals need to engage the attention of and be easily recognized by bees. I measured responses of bees to a floral mixture and its constituent monomolecular components. I found that natural floral mixtures engage the orientation of bees’ antennae more strongly than single-component odorants and also provide more consistent central brain responses between stimulations. Together, these studies highlight the importance of olfactory experience on different scales and how the nervous system might impose pressures to select the stimuli used as signals in communication networks. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Biology 2018
|
4 |
Calcium-Mediated Excitation and Plasticity in Primary Olfactory Pathways of the Honey Bee Antennal LobeJanuary 2014 (has links)
abstract: Spatiotemporal processing in the mammalian olfactory bulb (OB), and its analog, the invertebrate antennal lobe (AL), is subject to plasticity driven by biogenic amines. I study plasticity using honey bees, which have been extensively studied with respect to nonassociative and associative based olfactory learning and memory. Octopamine (OA) release in the AL is the functional analog to epinephrine in the OB. Blockade of OA receptors in the AL blocks plasticity induced changes in behavior. I have now begun to test specific hypotheses related to how this biogenic amine might be involved in plasticity in neural circuits within the AL. OA acts via different receptor subtypes, AmOA1, which gates calcium release from intracellular stores, and AmOA-beta, which results in an increase of cAMP. Calcium also enters AL interneurons via nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, which are driven by acetylcholine release from sensory neuron terminals, as well as through voltage-gated calcium channels. I employ 2-photon excitation (2PE) microscopy using fluorescent calcium indicators to investigate potential sources of plasticity as revealed by calcium fluctuations in AL projection neuron (PN) dendrites in vivo. PNs are analogous to mitral cells in the OB and have dendritic processes that show calcium increases in response to odor stimulation. These calcium signals frequently change after association of odor with appetitive reinforcement. However, it is unclear whether the reported plasticity in calcium signals are due to changes intrinsic to the PNs or to changes in other neural components of the network. My studies were aimed toward understanding the role of OA for establishing associative plasticity in the AL network. Accordingly, I developed a treatment that isolates intact, functioning PNs in vivo. A second study revealed that cAMP is a likely component of plasticity in the AL, thus implicating the AmOA-beta; receptors. Finally, I developed a method for loading calcium indicators into neural components of the AL that have yet to be studied in detail. These manipulations are now revealing the molecular mechanisms contributing to associative plasticity in the AL. These studies will allow for a greater understanding of plasticity in several neural components of the honey bee AL and mammalian OB. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Neuroscience 2014
|
5 |
Étude neurophysiologique et comportementale du frelon asiatique Vespa velutina / Neurophysiological and behavioral study of olfaction in an invasive hornet, Vespa velutinaCouto, Antoine 13 June 2016 (has links)
Le frelon Vespa velutina, est une espèce invasive introduite en France il y a une dizaine d’années. Cet Hyménoptère social chasse de nombreux insectes, et plus particulièrement des abeilles, exerçant une forte pression de prédation sur l’entomofaune. Son établissement en Europe est donc susceptible d’avoir un impact néfaste sur les activités humaines et sur la biodiversité locale. L’olfaction joue un rôle central dans la biologie du frelon, que ce soit pour la communication intraspécifique (phéromones) ou la recherche de nourriture. Pour limiter l’impact de V. velutina, une stratégie prometteuse serait d’interférer avec son comportement olfactif. Nous avons donc cherché à acquérir une meilleure connaissance du système olfactif des frelons ainsi que des signaux chimiques impliqués dans leur comportement de prédation. Nous avons tout d’abord décrit et comparé l’organisation du système olfactif des différentes castes d’une colonie de frelons. Le premier centre olfactif du cerveau, le lobe antennaire, est constitué d’unités morphologiques et fonctionelles, les glomérules. Nous avons démontré l’existence de glomérules hypertrophiées (macroglomérules), potentiellement spécialisées dans la détection des phéromones sexuelles, chez les mâles. Nous avons également observé des similarités neuroanatomiques frappantes dans l’organisation du lobe antennaire chez des Hyménoptères de familles différentes (fourmis, abeilles, frelons), permettant de reconstruire une partie de l’histoire évolutive de cette structure, au sein de cet ordre. En particulier, nous avons démontré l’homologie d’un groupe de glomérules impliqué dans le traitement des hydrocarbures cuticulaires, signaux de reconnaissance intraspécifique, chez les frelons et les fourmis. Ce système a pu représenter une préadaptation pour l’apparition de comportements sociaux dans ces familles. De plus, nos résultats ont montré que le nombre de glomérules dans ce système varie fortement chez différentes espèces de frelons, probablement en relation avec les différents niveaux de sympatrie dans lesquels vivent ces espèces. Le lobe antennaire des frelons présente ainsi des adaptations concernant aussi bien le nombre de glomérules que leurs volumes respectifs. Enfin, nous avons effectué des essais comportementaux pour déterminer quels composés odorants sont impliqués dans l’attraction de V. velutina envers les ruches d’abeilles domestiques. Nos résultats suggèrent que les ouvrières de frelon sont sélectivement attirées par des odorants indiquant la présence de ruches, dont des phéromones d’abeille. Ces résultats permettent d’envisager le développement de stratégies de piégeage utilisant des appâts olfactifs spécifiques. / The hornet Vespa velutina is an invasive species introduced from China to France about 10 years ago. This social hymenoptera preys on numerous insects species, but predominantly from honeybee colonies, hence exerting a stong predation pressure on insect fauna. Its etablishment to Europe can have strong detrimental effects on human activities and local biodiversity. Olfaction plays a central role in the biology and behavior of hornets, for both intraspecific communication or food search. To limit the impact of V. Velutina, a promising strategy would be to interfere with its olfactory behaviors. We thus aimed to acquire a better knowledge on the olfactory system of hornets and on the chemical signals involved in their predatory behavior. We first described and compared the organization of the olfactory system of the different castes of hornets. The first olfactory processing center, the antennal lobe, consists of morphological and functional units, the glomeruli. We have demonstrated the existence of enlarged glomeruli (macroglomeruli), potentially specialized in the detection of sex pheromones in males. We also observed striking neuroanatomical similarities in the antennal lobe organization of different Hymenoptera families (ants, bees, hornets) allowing to retrace part of the evolutionary history of this structure within that insect order. In particular, we demonstrated the homology of a glomerular cluster involved in the processing of cuticular hydrocarbons (intraspecific recognition signals) among hornets and ants. This systsem could be a preadaptation for the emergence of social behaviors in these families. In addition, our results showed that the number of glomeruli within this system varies across hornet species, probably due to the different sympatry levels these species experience. The hornet antennal lobe presents adaptations both in the number and the volume of glomeruli. Finally, we performed behavioral tests to identify odor compounds involved in the attraction of V. Velutina towards bee hives. Our results suggest that workers are selectively attracted to olfactory cues indicating the presence of hives, including some honeybee pheromones. These results allow considering the development of trapping strategies using specific baits.
|
6 |
Comportement reproducteur et communication sexuelle phéromonale chez les abeilles du genre Apis. / Mating behaviour and pheromonal sex communication in honey bees of the Apis genusBastin, Florian 12 December 2017 (has links)
Pendant la période de reproduction, les mâles et les reines d’abeilles du genre Apis se regroupent au sein de congrégations. Ces congrégations qui ont lieu haut dans le ciel sont particulièrement difficiles à étudier sur le terrain. Nous avons donc développé un simulateur de marche permettant de tester l’attractivité de signaux olfactifs chez l’abeille domestique, A. mellifera. Avec ce dispositif, notre travail montre qu’une odeur dégagée par un groupe de mâles en âge de se reproduire attire les autres mâles et les reines vierges. Cette interattraction des mâles est dépendante de l’âge et apparaît uniquement chez les mâles matures sexuellement (12-15 jours). En parallèle, des extraits chimiques de mâles ont été effectués et permettent de proposer des molécules candidates possiblement impliquées dans l’attraction des mâles et des reines vierges. Ce travail conforte l’hypothèse d’une phéromone sexuelle/d’agrégation émise par les mâles sexuellement matures et qui jouerait un rôle dans la formation et le maintien des congrégations. Nous nous sommes ensuite intéressés à l’évolution de la communication sexuelle phéromonale chez 5 espèces du genre Apis. Nous avons ainsi analysé l’organisation neuroanatomique du lobe antennaire (premier centre olfactif) des mâles. Les données montrent des différences marquées dans le nombre et la position des macroglomérules, structures spécialisées dans la détection des phéromones sexuelles. Les espèces d’abeilles naines (A. florea) et d’abeilles géantes (A. dorsata) possèdent 2 macroglomérules et les abeilles de cavités (A. cerana, A. koshevnikovi et A. mellifera) entre 3 et 4 macroglomérules, suggérant une complexification des échanges sexuels phéromonaux dans ce groupe. Cependant, toutes les espèces du genre Apis présentent un même macroglomérule, connu pour détecter le composé majeur de la phéromone de reine, le 9-ODA, chez Apis mellifera. Ce travail établit l’existence d’une phéromone de mâles chez les abeilles du genre Apis et suggère une influence des signaux olfactifs dans l’isolement reproducteur et la spéciation de ces abeilles. / During the mating season, honey bee males (drones) and queens gather at congregation areas high up in the air, which make their onsite study arduous. We developed a walking simulator to test the attractiveness of olfactory signals under controlled laboratory conditions in honey bees A. mellifera. Our results show that mature drones and virgin queens are both attracted by groups of sexually mature drones. This attraction between drones is influenced by sexual maturity, as only sexually mature drones (12-15 days old) display an inter-attraction. In parallel, we performed analyses of drones’ chemical profiles and proposed a number of candidates molecules possibly involved in olfactory attraction of virgin males and queens. This study supports the existence of a sexual/aggregation pheromone emitted by sexually mature drones, which may play a pivotal role in the formation and maintenance of congregations. We were then interested in the evolution of pheromonal sex communication in 5 species of the genus Apis. We thus analyzed the neuroanatomical organization of the drone antennal lobe (primary olfactory center). Our data revealed marked differences in the number and position of macroglomeruli, insects’ functional units dedicated to sex pheromone processing. Dwarf (A. florea) and giant (A. dorsata) honey bee species possess 2 macroglomeruli while cavity nesting bees (A. cerana, A. koshevnikovi and A. mellifera) present 3 or 4 macroglomeruli, suggesting an increase in the complexity of sexual communication in the genus Apis. Interestingly, one macroglomerulus, which is dedicated to the detection of the queen pheromone, 9-ODA in A. mellifera, was conserved in all species. This work establishes the existence of a male pheromone in Apis species and suggests an influence of olfactory signals in the reproductive isolation and speciation of these bees.
|
7 |
Transient and Attractor Dynamics in Models for Odor DiscriminationAhn, Sungwoo 31 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
|
8 |
Plant-insect interactions between female dogwood borer and appleFrank, Daniel L. 21 January 2010 (has links)
A rearing methodology for dogwood borer was developed, using standardized procedures at each developmental stage. These methods enabled the establishment of a laboratory colony and efficient production of synchronized cohorts of each of its lifestages throughout the year for specific experimental needs.
The behavioral repertoire shown by mated female dogwood borer in an apple orchard was characterized and quantified and the diel periodicity with which those behaviors occurred was determined. Mated females were easily recognized, based on their characteristic casting flight directed toward areas below the graft union of apple trees, and were observed more frequently during the late afternoon and evening. Casting flight, probing with the ovipositor, and oviposition were the most frequent behaviors observed, but the duration of those behaviors was relatively short compared with the much lengthier periods of resting behavior that typically occurred within the canopy.
Data from a previous, three-year study in two newly planted apple orchards were subjected to geostatistical analyses to examine the temporal and spatial patterns of infestation by larval dogwood borer and to gain further information about the spatial scales at which oviposition occurs. There were moderate to high degrees of aggregation of dogwood borer infestations on neighboring apple trees, with ranges of spatial dependence from 7.50–19.87 m. No directionality was observed in the spatial autocorrelation of infestation and it appears that females utilized oviposition sites equally along and across orchard rows. The aggregated nature of infestations requires that random, independent samples must be taken from a number of sample pairs at distances greater than the range of spatial dependence to ensure that sample data are not autocorrelated. Alternatively, an efficient sampling program for mapping dogwood borer infestation can be achieved by limiting sample points to distances within the range of spatial dependence. These sample points can be used in interpolating algorithms, such as kriging, to predict infestation at unsampled locations in space for use in site-specific pest management programs.
The external morphology of male and female dogwood borer antennae and their sensilla were examined using light and scanning electron microscopy to characterize, measure and compare the types, number, and distribution of sensilla. Although the general shape and size of male and female antennae were similar, those from females possessed a greater number of generally smaller antennal flagellomeres. The flagellum of both male and female antennae contained seven sensillum types including auricillica, basiconica, chaetica, coeloconica, squamiformia, styloconica, and three subtypes of sensilla trichoidea. With the exception of sensilla basiconica, which were present in roughly equal numbers on male and female antennae, all other sensillum types were significantly more abundant on female antennae. The antennae of female dogwood borer appear well equipped to perceive olfactory stimuli, based on the types and number of sensilla present.
Coupled gas chromatography and electroantennogram detection (GC-EAD) analyses of headspace collections from damaged and undamaged tissues from apple and dogwood trees were conducted to examine and compare the antennal responsiveness of female dogwood borer to host plant volatiles. A total of 16 and 9 compounds from apple and dogwood tissues, respectively, consistently elicited an antennal response in females. There were no differences in the response of antennae from virgin and mated females, and the amplitude of the female response to host odors was greater than that of males. Six compounds were identified from the headspace collections from apple trees, four of which (octanal, nonanal, decanal, and methyl salicylate) were identified from all apple tissues sampled. A novel compound,α-bergamotene, was identified from injured apple bark, from apple burr knots infested with dogwood borer larvae and from larval dogwood borer frass, and appears to be produced by apple trees in response to injury. Another novel compound, methyl-2,4-decadienoate, was identified from infested burr knot tissue and appears to be produced in response to an insect-plant interaction. Two compounds, hexanoic and nonanoic acid, were identified from headspace collections from dogwood trees.
Numerous approaches were used to examine the behavioral response of mated female dogwood borer to host plant headspace collections and to individual compounds from those collections that elicited a strong and repeatable antennal response. Under both natural and semi-natural conditions in the field and in laboratory bioassays, neither attraction/orientation or consistent oviposition were documented and it is apparent that correlating the electrophysiological and behavioral responses of mated female dogwood borer to olfactory stimuli from their host plants will require further research on bioassay development. / Ph. D.
|
9 |
Effet de faibles doses d'un insecticide néonicotinoïde sur le système olfactif d'un lépidoptère de ravageur des cultures, Agrotis ipsilon / Neonicotinoid insecticide low doses effects on the olfactory system of the lepidopteran crop pest, Agrotis ipsilonRabhi, Kaouther 06 November 2015 (has links)
Durant leur cycle de vie, les insectes doivent faire face à différents perturbateurs pour réussir à survivre et à se reproduire. L’utilisation de plus en plus répandue des insecticides néonicotinoïdes, en raison de leur grande efficacité, a conduit à l’accumulation de résidus dans l’environnement. Ceux-ci ont certainement un effet additif toxique sur les insectes cibles. Cependant il a été montré que ces résidus peuvent aussi avoir un effet positif non désiré sur certains traits de vie des insectes ravageurs.Dans ma thèse, j’ai étudié les effets d’un insecticide néonicotinoïde sur le système olfactif d’un insecte ravageur, la noctuelle Agrotis ipsilon. Nos résultats montrent que l’exposition aigüe des mâles à des faibles doses de clothianidine modifie leurs réponses comportementales à la phéromone sexuelle: une baisse est observée à la dose 0,25 ng/insecte (<DL0) alors que la doses de 10 ng (DL20) induit une augmentation de la réponse chez les adultes naïfs ou pré-exposés à la phéromone. Cet effet biphasique à faible et très faible dose s’apparente à un effet hormétique et les modifications observées sont corrélées avec des changements de sensibilité du système olfactif central et non périphérique. Nous émettons l’hypothèse que la clothianidine agirait sur l’expression des sous-unités des récepteurs nicotiniques pour lesquels elle joue le rôle d’agoniste, changeant leur affinité pour l’acétylcholine et perturbant ou améliorant la transmission synaptique des signaux sensoriels selon la dose. Nos résultats montrent que la prise en compte d’effets de doses sublétales d’insecticides est essentielle non seulement pour les insectes non cibles, mais aussi des insectes cibles. / Insects face a multitude of environmental stresses, which they have to bypass in order to survive and reproduce. The extensive use of neonicotinoid insecticides, because of their high efficiency, leads to the accumulation of residues in the environment, which can have an additive toxic effect on target insects. However, such residues can also have unwanted positive effects on certain life traits of pest insects. In my thesis I studied the effects of a neonicotinoid insecticide on the olfactory system of the pest insect Agrotis ipsilon. Our results show that acute oral treatments of males with low doses of clothianidin modify their behavioural responses to the sex pheromone: a treatment with 0.25 ng/moth (<LD0) induces a decrease of pheromone responses whereas intoxication with 10 ng/moth (LD20) leads to an increase in the capacity of naive and pre-exposed males to locate a pheromone source as compared to controls. We propose that this biphasic effect, with low dose stimulation and very low dose inhibition is an hormeticlike effect, that is correlated with sensitivity changes within the central, but not the peripheral olfactory system. We hypothesize that the observed modifications might be due to a differential effect of clothianidin on the expression of different subunits of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, which might change the affinity of the receptors for acetylcholine, and thus disturb or improve synaptic transmission of sensory signals as a function of the insecticide dose. Our results show that effects of sublethal doses of insecticides need to be taken into account not only for non-target, but also for target insects when evaluating pest management strategies.
|
10 |
Chemical signalling in the Drosophila brain : GABA, short neuropeptide F and their receptorsEnell, Lina E. January 2011 (has links)
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and short neuropeptide F (sNPF) are widespread signalling molecules in the brain of insects. In order to understand more about the signalling and to some extent start to unravel the functional roles of these two substances, this study has examined the locations of the transmitters and their receptors in the brain of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster using immunocytochemistry in combination with Gal4/UAS technique. The main focus is GABA and sNPF in feeding circuits and in the olfactory system. We found both GABA receptor types in neurons in many important areas of the Drosophila brain including the antennal lobe, mushroom body and the central body complex. The metabotropic GABAB receptor (GABABR) is expressed in a pattern similar to the ionotropic GABAAR, but some distribution differences can be distinguished (paper I). The insulin producing cells contain only GABABR, whereas the GABAAR is localized on neighbouring neurons. We found that GABA regulates the production and release of insulin-like peptides via GABABRs (paper II). The roles of sNPFs in feeding and growth have previously been established, but the mechanisms behind this are unclear. We mapped the distribution of sNPF with antisera to the sNPF precursor and found the peptide in a large variety of interneurons, including the Kenyon cells of the mushroom bodies, as well as in olfactory sensory neurons that send axons to the antennal lobe (paper III). We also mapped the distribution of the sNPF receptor in larval tissues and found localization in six median neurosecretory cells that are not insulin-producing cells, in neuronal branches in the larval antennal lobe and in processes innervating the mushroom bodies (paper IV). In summary, we have studied two different signal substances in the Drosophila brain (GABA and sNPF) in some detail. We found that these substances and their receptors are widespread, that both sNPF and GABA act in very diverse systems and that they presumably play roles in feeding, metabolism and olfaction. / At the time of doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 4: Manuscript.
|
Page generated in 0.0711 seconds