4.6 Article

Functional map of the macroglomerular complex of male Helicoverpa armigera

Journal

INSECT SCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 109-124

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1744-7917.13083

Keywords

intracellular recording; retrograde filling; macroglomerular complex; olfactory sensory neuron; single sensillum recording; anterograde filling

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This study investigated the physiology and morphology of olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) in male H. armigera, revealing the specific responses and axonal projection areas of OSNs in different sensillae. These findings provide a crucial foundation for further research on insect olfaction in this species.
The mechanism of sex pheromone reception in the male cotton bollworm Helicoverpa armigera has been extensively studied because it has become an important model system for understanding insect olfaction. However, the pathways of pheromone processing from the antenna to the primary olfactory center in H. armigera have not yet been clarified. Here, the physiology and morphology of male H. armigera olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) were studied using single sensillum recording along with anterograde filling and intracellular recording with retrograde filling. OSNs localized in type A sensilla responded to the major pheromone component cis-11-hexadecenal, and the axonal terminals projected to the cumulus (Cu) of the macroglomerular complex (MGC). The OSNs in type B sensilla responded to the behavioral antagonist cis-9-tetradecenal, and the axonal terminals projected to the dorsomedial anterior (DMA) unit of the MGC. In type C sensilla, there were 2 OSNs: one that responded to cis-9-tetradecenal and cis-11-hexadecenol with the axonal terminals projecting to the DMA, and another that responded to the secondary pheromone components cis-9-hexadecenal and cis-9-tetradecenal with the axonal terminals projecting to the dorsomedial posterior (DMP) unit of the MGC. Type A and type B sensilla also housed the secondary OSNs, which were silent neurons with axonal terminals projected to the glomerulus G49 and DMP. Overall, the neural pathways that carry information on attractiveness and aversiveness in response to female pheromone components in H. armigera exhibit distinct projections to the MGC units.

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