|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
Maturation of muscle properties and its hormonal control in an adult insect
1 Abteilung Neurobiologie, Universität Ulm, Albert-Einstein-Allee 11, D-89069 Ulm, Germany and
2 Institut für Zoologie und Anthropologie der Universität Göttingen, Berlinerstraße 28, D-37073 Göttingen, Germany
*e-mail: uwe.rose{at}biologie.uni-ulm.de
Accepted July 13, 2001
The oviposition of female locusts requires longitudinal muscles to tolerate remarkable lengthening. Whether this ability together with concomitant properties develops during maturation or is present throughout life was investigated. The properties of the locust abdominal muscles involved in oviposition behaviour were investigated with respect to their maturation, segment- and gender-specificity and regulation by juvenile hormone (JH). Muscles from the sixth abdominal segment (an oviposition segment) of mature females (>18 days old) were able to tolerate large extensions (>8 mm). At this length, muscles were still able to generate considerable neurally evoked twitch tension. In contrast, muscle fibres from females less than 5 days old did not tolerate extension of more than 4 mm. At this length, tension generation was negligible. The maximum tension generated at different stimulus frequencies was significantly higher in muscles of females more than 18 days old than in females less than 5 days old. Furthermore, the cross-sectional area of muscle fibres increased significantly during reproductive development. Current-clamp recordings from denervated muscle fibres of females more than 18 days old revealed their ability to generate overshooting action potentials. The potentials were tetrodotoxin (TTX)-insensitive (0.5 µmol l1 TTX), but were blocked by Cd2+ (50 µmol l1) or nifedipine (50 µmol l1), which suggests the involvement of L-type Ca2+ channels. Action potentials recorded from females less than 5 days old differed considerably in amplitude and shape from those recorded from females more than 18 days old, suggesting their maturation during the first 2 weeks of adult life. Inactivation of the corpora allata (CA) by precocene inhibited the maturation of these muscle properties, whereas injection of JH into precocene-treated females reversed this effect. Homologous muscles from the third abdominal segment (a non-oviposition segment, M169) and muscles from males (M214) revealed no comparable changes, although some minor changes occurred during reproductive development. The results suggest a gender- and segment-specific maturation of muscle properties that is related to reproductive behaviour and controlled by JH.
Key words: juvenile hormone, muscle properties, reproductive development, oviposition, insect, Locusta migratoria, development.