6533b827fe1ef96bd12863db

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Gastrin-cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity in the central nervous system of the milkweed bug, Spilostethus pandurus. Ultrastructural aspects of the reactive A cells of the brain

María Dolores GarceráMireille Tamarelle

subject

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtybiologyImmunocytochemistryCentral nervous systemNeuropeptideCell BiologyGeneral MedicineAnatomyImmunogold labellingbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.anatomical_structureSpilostethus pandurusmedicineUltrastructureGastrinCholecystokinin

description

Summary All the ganglia belonging to the central nervous system of adults of the milkweed bug Spilostethus pandurus (Hemiptera) were screened immunohistochemically for vertebrate gastrin-cholecystokinin (CCK-8(s))-like peptides. Several large reactive perikarya are present in the median part of the protocerebrum, their processes extending to the dorsal ‘aorta’. These cell bodies are also paraldehyde fuchsin-positive, ie they are A-type cells. In the lateral part of the protocerebrum, in the deutocerebrum and tritocerebrum, and in the suboesophageal, prothoracic and abdominal ganglia, a few immunoreactive cell bodies send axonal processes into their respective neuropiles. The A-type cells reactive to CCK antiserum were identified, at the ultrastructural level, by combining paraldehyde fuschin staining of semithin sections with a post-embedding immunogold technique carried out on adjacent ultrathin sections. The neurosecretory cells contain numerous vesicles of elevated electron density. These data suggest that members of the CCK peptide family are present in the central nervous system of Spilostethus pandurus .

https://doi.org/10.1016/0248-4900(96)89430-5