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1.
Proc Biol Sci ; 282(1800): 20142062, 2015 Feb 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25520357

RESUMEN

Serotonin is a neurochemical with evolutionarily conserved roles in orchestrating nervous system function and behavioural plasticity. A dramatic example is the rapid transformation of desert locusts from cryptic asocial animals into gregarious crop pests that occurs when drought forces them to accumulate on dwindling resources, triggering a profound alteration of behaviour within just a few hours. The onset of crowding induces a surge in serotonin within their thoracic ganglia that is sufficient and necessary to induce the switch from solitarious to gregarious behaviour. To identify the neurons responsible, we have analysed how acute exposure to three gregarizing stimuli--crowding, touching the hind legs or seeing and smelling other locusts--and prolonged group living affect the expression of serotonin in individual neurons in the thoracic ganglia. Quantitative analysis of cell body immunofluorescence revealed three classes of neurons with distinct expressional responses. All ganglia contained neurons that responded to multiple gregarizing stimuli with increased expression. A second class showed increased expression only in response to intense visual and olfactory stimuli from conspecifics. Prolonged group living affected a third and entirely different set of neurons, revealing a two-tiered role of the serotonergic system as both initiator and substrate of socially induced plasticity. This demonstrates the critical importance of ontogenetic time for understanding the function of serotonin in the reorganization of behaviour.


Asunto(s)
Saltamontes/fisiología , Neuronas Serotoninérgicas/metabolismo , Animales , Conducta Animal , Aglomeración , Saltamontes/metabolismo , Odorantes , Serotonina/metabolismo , Conducta Social , Medio Social , Factores de Tiempo , Tacto
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(7): E381-7, 2012 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22184243

RESUMEN

The mechanisms that integrate genetic and environmental information to coordinate the expression of complex phenotypes are little understood. We investigated the role of two protein kinases (PKs) in the population density-dependent transition to gregarious behavior that underlies swarm formation in desert locusts: the foraging gene product, a cGMP-dependent PK (PKG) implicated in switching between alternative group-related behaviors in several animal species; and cAMP-dependent PK (PKA), a signal transduction protein with a preeminent role in different forms of learning. Solitarious locusts acquire key behavioral characters of the swarming gregarious phase within just 1 to 4 h of forced crowding. Injecting the PKA inhibitor KT5720 before crowding prevented this transition, whereas injecting KT5823, an inhibitor of PKG, did not. Neither drug altered the behavior of long-term gregarious locusts. RNAi against foraging effectively reduced its expression in the central nervous system, but this did not prevent gregarization upon crowding. By contrast, solitarious locusts with an RNAi-induced reduction in PKA catalytic subunit C1 expression behaved less gregariously after crowding, and RNAi against the inhibitory R1 subunit promoted more extensive gregarization following a brief crowding period. A central role of PKA is congruent with the recent discovery that serotonin mediates gregarization in locusts and with findings in vertebrates that similarly implicate PKA in the capacity to cope with adverse life events. Our results show that PKA has been coopted into effecting the wide-ranging transformation from solitarious to gregarious behavior, with PKA-mediated behavioral plasticity resulting in an environmentally driven reorganization of a complex phenotype.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal/fisiología , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de AMP Cíclico/fisiología , Saltamontes/fisiología , Animales , Carbazoles/farmacología , Dominio Catalítico , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de AMP Cíclico/antagonistas & inhibidores , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Inhibidores de Proteínas Quinasas/farmacología , Pirroles/farmacología , Interferencia de ARN
3.
Proc Biol Sci ; 279(1743): 3697-705, 2012 Sep 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22764161

RESUMEN

Visually targeted reaching to a specific object is a demanding neuronal task requiring the translation of the location of the object from a two-dimensionsal set of retinotopic coordinates to a motor pattern that guides a limb to that point in three-dimensional space. This sensorimotor transformation has been intensively studied in mammals, but was not previously thought to occur in animals with smaller nervous systems such as insects. We studied horse-head grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Proscopididae) crossing gaps and found that visual inputs are sufficient for them to target their forelimbs to a foothold on the opposite side of the gap. High-speed video analysis showed that these reaches were targeted accurately and directly to footholds at different locations within the visual field through changes in forelimb trajectory and body position, and did not involve stereotyped searching movements. The proscopids estimated distant locations using peering to generate motion parallax, a monocular distance cue, but appeared to use binocular visual cues to estimate the distance of nearby footholds. Following occlusion of regions of binocular overlap, the proscopids resorted to peering to target reaches even to nearby locations. Monocular cues were sufficient for accurate targeting of the ipsilateral but not the contralateral forelimb. Thus, proscopids are capable not only of the sensorimotor transformations necessary for visually targeted reaching with their forelimbs but also of flexibly using different visual cues to target reaches.


Asunto(s)
Saltamontes/fisiología , Animales , Señales (Psicología) , Extremidades/fisiología , Locomoción , Masculino , Fenómenos Fisiológicos del Sistema Nervioso , Desempeño Psicomotor , Visión Ocular
4.
J Exp Biol ; 215(Pt 10): 1711-9, 2012 May 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22539738

RESUMEN

Avoiding food that contains toxins is crucial for the survival of many animals, particularly herbivores, because many plants defend themselves with toxins. Some animals can learn to avoid food containing toxins not through its taste but by the toxins' effects following ingestion, though how they do so remains unclear. We studied how desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria), which are generalist herbivores, form post-ingestive aversive memories and use them to make appropriate olfactory-based decisions in a Y-maze. Locusts form an aversion gradually to an odour paired with food containing the toxin nicotine hydrogen tartrate (NHT), suggesting the involvement of a long-latency associative mechanism. Pairing of odour and toxin-free food accompanied by NHT injections at different latencies showed that locusts could form an association between an odour and toxic malaise, which could be separated by up to 30 min. Tasting but not swallowing the food, or the temporal separation of odour and food, prevents the formation of these long-latency associations, showing that they are post-ingestive. A second associative mechanism not contingent upon feeding operates only when odour presentation is simultaneous with NHT injection. Post-ingestive memory formation is not disrupted by exposure to a novel odour alone but can be if the odour is accompanied by simultaneous NHT injection. Thus, the timing with which food, odour and toxin are encountered whilst foraging is likely to influence memory formation and subsequent foraging decisions. Therefore, locusts can form specific long-lasting aversive olfactory associations that they can use to avoid toxin-containing foods whilst foraging.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Saltamontes/fisiología , Hidrógeno/química , Aprendizaje , Nicotina/química , Odorantes , Animales , Conducta de Elección , Condicionamiento Clásico , Toma de Decisiones , Conducta Alimentaria , Herbivoria , Aprendizaje por Laberinto , Memoria , Olfato , Tartratos/farmacología , Factores de Tiempo
5.
J Exp Biol ; 214(Pt 15): 2495-503, 2011 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21753041

RESUMEN

Locusts can learn associations between olfactory stimuli and food rewards, and use the acquired memories to choose between foods according to their nutrient requirements. They are a model system for both the study of olfactory coding and insect nutritional regulation. Previous studies have used operant paradigms for conditioning freely moving locusts, restricting the study of the neural mechanisms underlying the acquisition of olfactory memories, which requires restrained preparations for electrophysiological recordings. Here we present two complementary paradigms for the classical conditioning of olfactory memories in restrained desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria). These paradigms allow precise experimental control over the parameters influencing learning. The first paradigm is based on classical (Pavlovian) appetitive conditioning. We show that opening of the maxillary palps can be used as a measure of memory acquisition. Maxillary palp opening in response to odour presentation is significantly higher in locusts trained with paired presentation of an odour and a food reward than in locusts trained either with unpaired presentation of food and odour or the odour alone. The memory formed by this conditioning paradigm lasts for at least 24 h. In the second paradigm, we show that classical conditioning of an odour memory in restrained locusts influences their decisions in a subsequent operant task. When locusts that have been trained to associate an odour with a food reward are placed in a Y-maze, they choose the arm containing that odour significantly more often than naïve locusts. A single conditioning trial is sufficient to induce a significant bias for that odour for up to 4 h. Multiple- and block-trial training induce a significant bias that lasts at least 24 h. Thus, locusts are capable of forming appetitive olfactory memories in classical conditioning paradigms and can use these memories to modify their decisions.


Asunto(s)
Saltamontes/fisiología , Animales , Aprendizaje por Asociación , Etología/métodos , Boca/fisiología , Odorantes , Olfato
6.
Proc Biol Sci ; 277(1697): 3087-96, 2010 Oct 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20507896

RESUMEN

The behavioural demands of group living and foraging have been implicated in both evolutionary and plastic changes in brain size. Desert locusts show extreme phenotypic plasticity, allowing brain morphology to be related to very different lifestyles in one species. At low population densities, locusts occur in a solitarious phase that avoids other locusts and is cryptic in appearance and behaviour. Crowding triggers the transformation into the highly active gregarious phase, which aggregates into dense migratory swarms. We found that the brains of gregarious locusts have very different proportions and are also 30 per cent larger overall than in solitarious locusts. To address whether brain proportions change with size through nonlinear scaling (allometry), we conducted the first comprehensive major axis regression analysis of scaling relations in an insect brain. This revealed that phase differences in brain proportions arise from a combination of allometric effects and deviations from the allometric expectation (grade shifts). In consequence, gregarious locusts had a larger midbrainoptic lobe ratio, a larger central complex and a 50 per cent larger ratio of the olfactory primary calyx to the first olfactory neuropile. Solitarious locusts invest more in low-level sensory processing, having disproportionally larger primary visual and olfactory neuropiles, possibly to gain sensitivity. The larger brains of gregarious locusts prioritize higher integration, which may support the behavioural demands of generalist foraging and living in dense and highly mobile swarms dominated by intense intraspecific competition.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Encéfalo/anatomía & histología , Saltamontes/anatomía & histología , Animales , Tamaño Corporal , Saltamontes/fisiología , Masculino , Mesencéfalo/anatomía & histología , Neurópilo , Tamaño de los Órganos , Densidad de Población , Análisis de Regresión , Olfato , Percepción Visual
7.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 15953, 2020 09 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32994425

RESUMEN

Malpighian tubules, analogous to vertebrate nephrons, play a key role in insect osmoregulation and detoxification. Tubules can become infected with a protozoan, Malpighamoeba, which damages their epithelial cells, potentially compromising their function. Here we used a modified Ramsay assay to quantify the impact of Malpighamoeba infection on fluid secretion and P-glycoprotein-dependent detoxification by desert locust Malpighian tubules. Infected tubules have a greater surface area and a higher fluid secretion rate than uninfected tubules. Infection also impairs P-glycoprotein-dependent detoxification by reducing the net rhodamine extrusion per surface area. However, due to the increased surface area and fluid secretion rate, infected tubules have similar total net extrusion per tubule to uninfected tubules. Increased fluid secretion rate of infected tubules likely exposes locusts to greater water stress and increased energy costs. Coupled with reduced efficiency of P-glycoprotein detoxification per surface area, Malpighamoeba infection is likely to reduce insect survival in natural environments.


Asunto(s)
Amebiasis/parasitología , Amébidos/metabolismo , Túbulos de Malpighi/fisiología , Subfamilia B de Transportador de Casetes de Unión a ATP/metabolismo , Miembro 1 de la Subfamilia B de Casetes de Unión a ATP/metabolismo , Amébidos/patogenicidad , Animales , Transporte Biológico/fisiología , Secreciones Corporales/metabolismo , Células Epiteliales/metabolismo , Saltamontes/metabolismo , Saltamontes/parasitología , Saltamontes/fisiología , Infecciones/metabolismo , Túbulos de Malpighi/microbiología , Equilibrio Hidroelectrolítico
8.
F1000Res ; 9: 775, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33163158

RESUMEN

Background: At the time of publication, the most devastating desert locust crisis in decades is affecting East Africa, the Arabian Peninsula and South-West Asia. The situation is extremely alarming in East Africa, where Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia face an unprecedented threat to food security and livelihoods. Most of the time, however, locusts do not occur in swarms, but live as relatively harmless solitary insects. The phenotypically distinct solitarious and gregarious locust phases differ markedly in many aspects of behaviour, physiology and morphology, making them an excellent model to study how environmental factors shape behaviour and development. A better understanding of the extreme phenotypic plasticity in desert locusts will offer new, more environmentally sustainable ways of fighting devastating swarms. Methods: High molecular weight DNA derived from two adult males was used for Mate Pair and Paired End Illumina sequencing and PacBio sequencing. A reliable reference genome of Schistocerca gregaria was assembled using the ABySS pipeline, scaffolding was improved using LINKS. Results: In total, 1,316 Gb Illumina reads and 112 Gb PacBio reads were produced and assembled. The resulting draft genome consists of 8,817,834,205 bp organised in 955,015 scaffolds with an N50 of 157,705 bp, making the desert locust genome the largest insect genome sequenced and assembled to date. In total, 18,815 protein-encoding genes are predicted in the desert locust genome, of which 13,646 (72.53%) obtained at least one functional assignment based on similarity to known proteins. Conclusions: The desert locust genome data will contribute greatly to studies of phenotypic plasticity, physiology, neurobiology, molecular ecology, evolutionary genetics and comparative genomics, and will promote the desert locust's use as a model system. The data will also facilitate the development of novel, more sustainable strategies for preventing or combating swarms of these infamous insects.


Asunto(s)
Saltamontes , Animales , Secuencia de Bases , Genoma de los Insectos , Saltamontes/genética , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento , Kenia , Masculino
9.
J Neurosci Methods ; 172(2): 220-30, 2008 Jul 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18585788

RESUMEN

Confocal microscopy enables the analysis of immunofluorescence in whole-mount brains and is therefore widely used in the functional and comparative neuroanatomy of invertebrates. Three difficulties, however, are commonly encountered. First, poor penetration of antibodies after formaldehyde fixation impedes the immunostaining in central neuropile regions. Second, formaldehyde can cause a loss of antigenicity by epitope masking. Third, large brains must be cleared in hydrophobic media, a procedure that may distort morphology. I present a new methodology that overcomes these three problems by using zinc-formaldehyde (ZnFA) for fixation. The success of this technique is demonstrated in the brain of the desert locust and evaluated by comparison with fixation in formaldehyde and immunostaining against synapsin to reveal the regions of synaptic integration throughout the brain. ZnFA fixation markedly increased antibody penetration, prevented synapsin epitope masking, and in the cleared preparation the morphology of the brain was preserved with great fidelity. Possible mechanisms responsible for these improvements are discussed. Successful double labelling for synapsin and serotonin shows that small-molecule antigens are also retained by ZnFA fixation. The methodology should facilitate a range of applications including whole-mount brain stereology and the generation of digital standard brains. It may furthermore facilitate the detection of other protein antigens in large intact specimens such as vertebrate embryos.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/citología , Saltamontes/citología , Inmunohistoquímica/métodos , Microscopía Confocal/métodos , Sinapsinas/química , Fijación del Tejido/métodos , Animales , Anticuerpos/química , Anticuerpos/inmunología , Especificidad de Anticuerpos/inmunología , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Forma de la Célula/fisiología , Fijadores/química , Formaldehído/química , Saltamontes/metabolismo , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Cuerpos Pedunculados/citología , Cuerpos Pedunculados/metabolismo , Vías Nerviosas/citología , Vías Nerviosas/metabolismo , Neuronas/química , Neuronas/citología , Serotonina/análisis , Serotonina/química , Serotonina/metabolismo , Coloración y Etiquetado , Sinapsis/metabolismo , Sinapsis/ultraestructura , Sinapsinas/análisis , Sinapsinas/inmunología , Zinc/química
10.
Front Behav Neurosci ; 12: 137, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30087601

RESUMEN

Phenotypic plasticity often entails coordinated changes in multiple traits. The effects of two alternative environments on multiple phenotypic traits can be analyzed by multivariable binary logistic regression (LR). Locusts are grasshopper species (family Acrididae) with a capacity to transform between two distinct integrated phenotypes or "phases" in response to changes in population density: a solitarious phase, which occurs when densities are low, and a gregarious phase, which arises as a consequence of crowding and can form very large and economically damaging swarms. The two phases differ in behavior, physiology and morphology. A large body of work on the mechanistic basis of behavioral phase transitions has relied on LR models to estimate the probability of behavioral gregariousness from multiple behavioral variables. Mart́in-Blázquez and Bakkali (2017; [10.1111/eea.12564]10.1111/eea.12564) have recently proposed standardized LR models for estimating an overall "gregariousness level" from a combination of behavioral and, unusually, morphometric variables. Here I develop a detailed argument to demonstrate that the premise of such an overall "gregariousness level" is fundamentally flawed, since locust phase transformations entail a decoupling of behavior and morphology. LR models that combine phenotypic traits with markedly different response times to environmental change are of very limited value for analyses of phase change in locusts, and of environmentally induced phenotypic transitions in general. I furthermore show why behavioral variables should not be adjusted by measures of body size that themselves differ between the two phases. I discuss the models fitted by Mart́in-Blázquez and Bakkali (2017) to highlight potential pitfalls in statistical methodology that must be avoided when analysing associations between complex phenotypes and alternative environments. Finally, I reject the idea that "standardized models" provide a valid shortcut to estimating phase state across different developmental stages, strains or species. The points addressed here are pertinent to any research on transitions between complex phenotypes and behavioral syndromes.

11.
J Comp Neurol ; 501(3): 381-99, 2007 Mar 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17245703

RESUMEN

Nitric oxide (NO) is a diffusible signaling molecule with evolutionarily conserved roles in neural plasticity. Prominent expression of NO synthase (NOS) in the primary olfactory centers of mammals and insects lead to the notion of a special role for NO in olfaction. In insects, however, NOS is also strongly expressed in non-olfactory chemo-tactile centers of the thoracic nerve cord. The functional significance of this apparent association with various sensory centers is unclear, as is the extent to which it occurs in other arthropods. We therefore investigated the expression of NOS in the pereopod ganglia of crayfish (Pacifastacus lenisculus and Procambarus clarkii). Conventional NADPH diaphorase (NADPHd) staining after formaldehyde fixation gave poor anatomic detail, whereas fixation in methanol/formalin (MF-NADPHd) resulted in Golgi-like staining, which was supported by immunohistochemistry using NOS antibodies that recognize a 135-kDa protein in crayfish. MF-NADPHd revealed an exceedingly dense innervation of the chemo-tactile centers. As in insects, this innervation was provided by a system of prominent intersegmental neurons. Superimposed on a putatively conserved architecture, however, were pronounced segmental differences. Strong expression occurred only in the anterior three pereopod ganglia, correlating with the presence of claws on pereopods one to three. These clawed pereopods, in addition to their role in locomotion, are crucially involved in feeding, where they serve both sensory and motor functions. Our findings indicate that strong expression of NOS is not a universal feature of primary sensory centers but instead may subserve a specific requirement for sensory plasticity that arises only in particular behavioral contexts.


Asunto(s)
Astacoidea/enzimología , Ganglios de Invertebrados/enzimología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa/metabolismo , Células Receptoras Sensoriales/enzimología , Olfato/fisiología , Gusto/fisiología , Animales , Extremidades/inervación , Extremidades/fisiología , Inmunohistoquímica , NADPH Deshidrogenasa/metabolismo , Vías Nerviosas/enzimología , Coloración y Etiquetado , Distribución Tisular , Tacto/fisiología
12.
J Neurosci ; 25(28): 6520-32, 2005 Jul 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16014713

RESUMEN

In vertebrate and invertebrate brains, nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) is frequently expressed in extensive meshworks (plexuses) of exceedingly fine fibers. In this paper, we investigate the functional implications of this morphology by modeling NO diffusion in fiber systems of varying fineness and dispersal. Because size severely limits the signaling ability of an NO-producing fiber, the predominance of fine fibers seems paradoxical. Our modeling reveals, however, that cooperation between many fibers of low individual efficacy can generate an extensive and strong volume signal. Importantly, the signal produced by such a system of cooperating dispersed fibers is significantly more homogeneous in both space and time than that produced by fewer larger sources. Signals generated by plexuses of fine fibers are also better centered on the active region and less dependent on their particular branching morphology. We conclude that an ultrafine plexus is configured to target a volume of the brain with a homogeneous volume signal. Moreover, by translating only persistent regional activity into an effective NO volume signal, dispersed sources integrate neural activity over both space and time. In the mammalian cerebral cortex, for example, the NOS plexus would preferentially translate persistent regional increases in neural activity into a signal that targets blood vessels residing in the same region of the cortex, resulting in an increased regional blood flow. We propose that the fineness-dependent properties of volume signals may in part account for the presence of similar NOS plexus morphologies in distantly related animals.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/enzimología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa de Tipo I/metabolismo , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo , Algoritmos , Animales , Corteza Cerebral/citología , Difusión , Ganglios de Invertebrados/citología , Saltamontes , Neuronas/ultraestructura , Orgánulos/enzimología , Orgánulos/ultraestructura , Ratas , Especificidad de la Especie
13.
J Neurosci ; 25(5): 1188-92, 2005 Feb 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15689555

RESUMEN

In a number of neuronal models of learning, signaling by the neurotransmitter nitric oxide (NO), synthesized by the enzyme neuronal NO synthase (nNOS), is essential for the formation of long-term memory (LTM). Using the molluscan model system Lymnaea, we investigate here whether LTM formation is associated with specific changes in the activity of members of the NOS gene family: Lym-nNOS1, Lym-nNOS2, and the antisense RNA-producing pseudogene (anti-NOS). We show that expression of the Lym-nNOS1 gene is transiently upregulated in cerebral ganglia after conditioning. The activation of the gene is precisely timed and occurs at the end of a critical period during which NO is required for memory consolidation. Moreover, we demonstrate that this induction of the Lym-nNOS1 gene is targeted to an identified modulatory neuron called the cerebral giant cell (CGC). This neuron gates the conditioned feeding response and is an essential part of the neural network involved in LTM formation. We also show that the expression of the anti-NOS gene, which functions as a negative regulator of nNOS expression, is downregulated in the CGC by training at 4 h after conditioning, during the critical period of NO requirement. This appears to be the first report of the timed and targeted differential regulation of the activity of a group of related genes involved in the production of a neurotransmitter that is necessary for learning, measured in an identified neuron of known function. We also provide the first example of the behavioral regulation of a pseudogene.


Asunto(s)
Condicionamiento Clásico/fisiología , Ganglios de Invertebrados/fisiología , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Lymnaea/fisiología , Memoria/fisiología , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/genética , Neuronas/fisiología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa/genética , Óxido Nítrico/fisiología , Seudogenes/genética , ARN sin Sentido/genética , Recompensa , Animales , Aprendizaje por Asociación/fisiología , Conducta Alimentaria/fisiología , Ganglios de Invertebrados/enzimología , Red Nerviosa/fisiología , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/biosíntesis , Neuronas/enzimología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa/biosíntesis , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa de Tipo I , Pentanoles/farmacología , ARN sin Sentido/biosíntesis , Distribución Aleatoria , Sacarosa/farmacología , Factores de Tiempo
14.
Sci Rep ; 6: 35608, 2016 10 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27752110

RESUMEN

Desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria) show a dramatic form of socially induced phenotypic plasticity known as phase polyphenism. In the absence of conspecifics, locusts occur in a shy and cryptic solitarious phase. Crowding with conspecifics drives a behavioural transformation towards gregariousness that occurs within hours and is followed by changes in physiology, colouration and morphology, resulting in the full gregarious phase syndrome. We analysed methylation-sensitive amplified fragment length polymorphisms (MS-AFLP) to compare the effect of acute and chronic crowding on DNA methylation in the central nervous system. We find that crowd-reared and solitary-reared locusts show markedly different neural MS-AFLP fingerprints. However, crowding for a day resulted in neural MS-AFLP fingerprints that were clearly distinct from both crowd-reared and uncrowded solitary-reared locusts. Our results indicate that changes in DNA methylation associated with behavioural gregarisation proceed through intermediate states that are not simply partial realisations of the endpoint states.


Asunto(s)
Sistema Nervioso Central/fisiología , Saltamontes/fisiología , Estadios del Ciclo de Vida/genética , Adaptación Fisiológica , Análisis del Polimorfismo de Longitud de Fragmentos Amplificados , Animales , Conducta Animal , Aglomeración , Dermatoglifia del ADN , Metilación de ADN , Epigénesis Genética , Fenotipo , Polimorfismo Genético , Conducta Social
15.
J Comp Neurol ; 524(9): 1747-69, 2016 Jun 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26918905

RESUMEN

Behavioral and sensory adaptations are often reflected in the differential expansion of brain components. These volumetric differences represent changes in cell number, size, and/or connectivity, which may denote changes in the functional and evolutionary relationships between different brain regions, and between brain composition and behavioral ecology. Here we describe the brain composition of two species of Heliconius butterflies, a long-standing study system for investigating ecological adaptation and speciation. We confirm a previous report of a striking volumetric expansion of the mushroom body, and explore patterns of differential posteclosion and experience-dependent plasticity between different brain regions. This analysis uncovers age- and experience-dependent posteclosion mushroom body growth comparable to that in foraging Hymenoptera, but also identifies plasticity in several other neuropils. An interspecific analysis indicates that Heliconius display a remarkably large investment in mushroom bodies for a lepidopteran, and indeed rank highly compared to other insects. Our analyses lay the foundation for future comparative and experimental analyses that will establish Heliconius as a valuable case study in evolutionary neurobiology.


Asunto(s)
Mapeo Encefálico , Encéfalo/citología , Encéfalo/crecimiento & desarrollo , Neurópilo/fisiología , Adaptación Fisiológica , Factores de Edad , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Mariposas Diurnas , Femenino , Imagenología Tridimensional , Masculino , Microscopía Confocal , Vías Nerviosas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Vías Nerviosas/metabolismo , Análisis de Componente Principal , Pupa , Sinapsinas/metabolismo
16.
Integr Comp Biol ; 56(5): 914-924, 2016 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27549202

RESUMEN

The ability to learn and store information should be adapted to the environment in which animals operate to confer a selective advantage. Yet the relationship between learning, memory, and the environment is poorly understood, and further complicated by phenotypic plasticity caused by the very environment in which learning and memory need to operate. Many insect species show polyphenism, an extreme form of phenotypic plasticity, allowing them to occupy distinct environments by producing two or more alternative phenotypes. Yet how the learning and memories capabilities of these alternative phenotypes are adapted to their specific environments remains unknown for most polyphenic insect species. The desert locust can exist as one of two extreme phenotypes or phases, solitarious and gregarious. Recent studies of associative food-odor learning in this locust have shown that aversive but not appetitive learning differs between phases. Furthermore, switching from the solitarious to the gregarious phase (gregarization) prevents locusts acquiring new learned aversions, enabling them to convert an aversive memory formed in the solitarious phase to an appetitive one in the gregarious phase. This conversion provides a neuroecological mechanism that matches key changes in the behavioral environments of the two phases. These findings emphasize the importance of understanding the neural mechanisms that generate ecologically relevant behaviors and the interactions between different forms of behavioral plasticity.


Asunto(s)
Adaptación Fisiológica/fisiología , Ambiente , Saltamontes/fisiología , Animales , Memoria/fisiología , Fenotipo
17.
J Comp Neurol ; 484(2): 206-23, 2005 Apr 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15736229

RESUMEN

Nitric oxide (NO), generated enzymatically by NO synthase (NOS), acts as an important signaling molecule in the nervous systems of vertebrates and invertebrates. In insects, NO has been implicated in development and in various aspects of sensory processing. To understand better the contribution of NO signaling to higher level brain functions, we analyzed the distribution of NOS in the midbrain of a model insect species, the locust Schistocerca gregaria, by using NADPH diaphorase (NADPHd) histochemistry after methanol/formalin fixation; results were validated by NOS immunohistochemistry. NADPHd yielded much higher sensitivity and resolution, but otherwise the two techniques resulted in corresponding labeling patterns throughout the brain, except for intense immunostaining but only weak NADPHd staining in median neurosecretory cells. About 470 neuronal cell bodies in the locust midbrain were NADPHd-positive positive, and nearly all major neuropil centers contained dense, sharply stained arborizations. We report several novel types of NOS-expressing neurons, including small ocellar interneurons and antennal sensory neurons that bypass the antennal lobe. Highly prominent labeling occurred in the central complex, a brain area involved in sky-compass orientation, and was analyzed in detail. Innervation by NOS-expressing fibers was most notable in the central body upper and lower divisions, the lateral accessory lobes, and the noduli. About 170 NADPHd-positive neurons contributed to this innervation, including five classes of tangential neuron, two systems of pontine neuron, and a system of columnar neurons. The results provide new insights into the neurochemical architecture of the central complex and suggest a prominent role for NO signaling in this brain area.


Asunto(s)
Saltamontes/enzimología , Sistema Nervioso/enzimología , Neurópilo/enzimología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa/metabolismo , Animales , Femenino , Saltamontes/fisiología , Masculino , Mesencéfalo/química , Mesencéfalo/citología , Mesencéfalo/enzimología , Neurópilo/química , Neurópilo/citología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa/fisiología , Transducción de Señal/fisiología
18.
J Comp Neurol ; 523(6): 869-91, 2015 Apr 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25400217

RESUMEN

Interspecific comparisons of brain structure can inform our functional understanding of brain regions, identify adaptations to species-specific ecologies, and explore what constrains adaptive changes in brain structure, and coevolution between functionally related structures. The value of such comparisons is enhanced when the species considered have known ecological differences. The Lepidoptera have long been a favored model in evolutionary biology, but to date descriptions of brain anatomy have largely focused on a few commonly used neurobiological model species. We describe the brain of Godyris zavaleta (Ithomiinae), a member of a subfamily of Neotropical butterflies with enhanced reliance on olfactory information. We demonstrate for the first time the presence of sexually dimorphic glomeruli within a distinct macroglomerular complex (MGC) in the antennal lobe of a diurnal butterfly. This presents a striking convergence with the well-known moth MGC, prompting a discussion of the potential mechanisms behind the independent evolution of specialized glomeruli. Interspecific analyses across four Lepidoptera further show that the relative size of sensory neuropils closely mirror interspecific variation in sensory ecology, with G. zavaleta displaying levels of sensory investment intermediate between the diurnal monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus), which invests heavily in visual neuropil, and night-flying moths, which invest more in olfactory neuropil. We identify several traits that distinguish butterflies from moths, and several that distinguish D. plexippus and G. zavaleta. Our results illustrate that ecological selection pressures mold the structure of invertebrate brains, and exemplify how comparative analyses across ecologically divergent species can illuminate the functional significance of variation in brain structure.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/anatomía & histología , Mariposas Diurnas/anatomía & histología , Neurópilo/citología , Vías Olfatorias/anatomía & histología , Animales , Antenas de Artrópodos/anatomía & histología , Evolución Biológica , Femenino , Masculino , Microscopía Confocal , Cuerpos Pedunculados/anatomía & histología , Cuerpos Pedunculados/metabolismo , Caracteres Sexuales , Estadísticas no Paramétricas , Sinapsinas/metabolismo , Vías Visuales/anatomía & histología
19.
Insect Biochem Mol Biol ; 63: 7-13, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25958827

RESUMEN

While most adult Lepidoptera use flower nectar as their primary food source, butterflies in the genus Heliconius have evolved the novel ability to acquire amino acids from consuming pollen. Heliconius butterflies collect pollen on their proboscis, moisten the pollen with saliva, and use a combination of mechanical disruption and chemical degradation to release free amino acids that are subsequently re-ingested in the saliva. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms of this complex pollen feeding adaptation. Here we report an initial shotgun proteomic analysis of saliva from Heliconius melpomene. Results from liquid-chromatography tandem mass-spectrometry confidently identified 31 salivary proteins, most of which contained predicted signal peptides, consistent with extracellular secretion. Further bioinformatic annotation of these salivary proteins indicated the presence of four distinct functional classes: proteolysis (10 proteins), carbohydrate hydrolysis (5), immunity (6), and "housekeeping" (4). Additionally, six proteins could not be functionally annotated beyond containing a predicted signal sequence. The presence of several salivary proteases is consistent with previous demonstrations that Heliconius saliva has proteolytic capacity. It is likely that these proteins play a key role in generating free amino acids during pollen digestion. The identification of proteins functioning in carbohydrate hydrolysis is consistent with Heliconius butterflies consuming nectar, like other lepidopterans, as well as pollen. Immune-related proteins in saliva are also expected, given that ingestion of pathogens is a likely route to infection. The few "housekeeping" proteins are likely not true salivary proteins and reflect a modest level of contamination that occurred during saliva collection. Among the unannotated proteins were two sets of paralogs, each seemingly the result of a relatively recent tandem duplication. These results offer a first glimpse into the molecular foundation of Heliconius pollen feeding and provide a substantial advance towards comprehensively understanding this striking evolutionary novelty.


Asunto(s)
Mariposas Diurnas/química , Proteínas de Insectos/análisis , Polen , Proteoma/análisis , Saliva/química , Proteínas y Péptidos Salivales/análisis , Animales , Conducta Alimentaria , Hidrólisis , Proteolisis , Proteómica
20.
J Comp Neurol ; 448(2): 165-85, 2002 Jun 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12012428

RESUMEN

Formaldehyde-insensitive NADPH diaphorase (NADPHd) activity is used widely as a histochemical marker for neuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS). However, in several insects including the cockroach Periplaneta americana, NOS is apparently formaldehyde-sensitive; NADPHd fails to reveal neuron morphology and results in faint generalized staining. Here we have used a novel fixative, methanol/ formalin (MF), to reveal for the first time the neuroarchitecture of NADPHd in the cockroach, with intense selective staining occurring in neurons throughout the brain and thoracic ganglia. Immunocytochemical and histochemical analysis of cockroach and locust nervous systems indicated that neuronal NADPHd after MF fixation can be attributed to NOS. However, NADPHd in locust glial and perineurial cells was histochemically different from that in neurons and may thus be due to enzymes other than NOS. Histochemical implications of species-specific enzyme properties and of the transcriptional complexity of the NOS gene are discussed. The present findings suggest that MF fixation is a valuable new tool for the comparative analysis of the neuroarchitecture of NO signaling in insects. The Golgi-like definition of the staining enabled analysis of the NADPHd architecture in the cockroach and comparison with that in the locust. NADPHd in the tactile neuropils of the thoracic ganglia showed a similar organization in the two species. The olfactory glomeruli of the antennal lobes were in both species densely innervated by NADPHd-positive local interneurons that correlated in number with the number of glomeruli. Thus, the NADPHd architectures appear highly conserved in primary sensory neuropils. In the cockroach mushroom bodies, particularly dense staining in the gamma-layer of the lobes was apparently derived from Kenyon cells, whereas extrinsic arborizations were organized in domains across the lobes, an architecture that contrasts with the previously described tubular compartmentalization of locust mushroom bodies. These divergent architectures may result in different spatiotemporal dynamics of NO diffusion and suggest species differences in the role of NO in the mushroom bodies.


Asunto(s)
Cucarachas/enzimología , Formaldehído , Saltamontes/enzimología , Metanol , NADPH Deshidrogenasa/metabolismo , Sistema Nervioso/enzimología , Óxido Nítrico Sintasa/metabolismo , Fijación del Tejido/métodos , Animales , Encéfalo/citología , Encéfalo/enzimología , Cucarachas/citología , Femenino , Ganglios de Invertebrados/citología , Ganglios de Invertebrados/enzimología , Saltamontes/citología , Histocitoquímica/métodos , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Masculino , Sistema Nervioso/citología , Neuroglía/citología , Neuroglía/enzimología , Neuronas Nitrérgicas/citología , Neuronas Nitrérgicas/enzimología , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo
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