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. 1971;3(4):665-74.
doi: 10.1016/s0040-8166(71)80012-5.

The role of pore structures in the selective permeability of antennal sensilla of the desert burrowing cockroach, Arenivaga sp

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The role of pore structures in the selective permeability of antennal sensilla of the desert burrowing cockroach, Arenivaga sp

S D Hawke et al. Tissue Cell. 1971.

Abstract

To obtain information about the chemical composition of pore structures in antennal sensilla, the antennae were exposed to lipid solvents, or they were prepared to show negative-contrast images in electron micrographs. A heavy-metal tracer, lanthanum nitrate, was also used to indicate the permeability of the receptors to water. The grooves of the large grooved peg open into tubular cavities containing electron-opaque material, through which stimulatory molecules must pass to reach the sensory dendrites at the center of the sensillum. The material in these cavities was removed by chloroform or acetone, suggesting a lipid composition. Lanthanum penetrated this receptor only after it had been exposed to acetone or chloroform. Strands at pores of the thin-walled pegs were also removed by the lipid solvents, and the water-soluble tracer failed to penetrate these receptors unless they had been previously exposed to chloroform or acetone. The pore structures appear to be hydrophobic, allowing entry of lipid-soluble substances, while preventing passage of water. The differential action of the solvents on the various types of sensilla suggests that receptor discrimination among different classes of chemical stimuli may be partially determined by the chemical properties of structures at the sensillar pores.

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