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Comparative Study
. 1984;77(2):219-32.
doi: 10.1016/0742-8413(84)90005-7.

Neuromuscular transmission in a primitive insect: modulation by octopamine, and catch-like tension

Comparative Study

Neuromuscular transmission in a primitive insect: modulation by octopamine, and catch-like tension

G Hoyle. Comp Biochem Physiol C Comp Pharmacol Toxicol. 1984.

Abstract

The third pair of legs of the primitive New Zealand orthopteran insect, the " weta ", has and innervation and muscle cell distribution exactly similar to that of locusts, but wetas do not jump. Neuromuscular transmission to the slow excitatory axon ( SETi ) is potentiated more than 10-fold by the natural modulator octopamine (OCT). A brief burst of SETi impulses following infusion of as little as 10(-8) M OCT is followed by a very long-lasting plateau of catch-like tension (CT). The plateau is abruptly relaxed by a single inhibitory impulse, or even by a single SETi impulse if this arrives no sooner than about 30 sec following excitation. CT is used by wetas in a defense posture. Locusts and grasshoppers have a different type of modulation by OCT.

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