Abstract

1. 1. The ED 50 for loss of righting behaviour of cockroaches induced by kainate (43 μ mol/kg body weight) indicated the toxicity of kainate to be much greater than would have been predicted from the excitatory action of this amino acid at insect skeletal muscle fibres. N- Methyl- D-aspartate had little effect on righting behaviour ( ED 50 > 3500 μ mol/g body weight). 2. 2. Electrical recordings from the locust ventral nerve cord showed kainate (0.1–2 mM) to have a depolarizing action on neurones within the metathoracic ganglion. The depolarizing action of kainate was partially resistant to tetrodotoxin. 3. 3. The kainate-induced abolition of rostrally evoked potentials recorded in the abdominal connectives from the metathoracic ganglion suggests that the giant fibres are sensitive to kainate. Domoic acid was 46 times more potent than kainate. 4. 4. The lack of effect of N- methyl- D- aspartate (2 mM) , dihydrokainate (2 mM), quisqualate (2 mM) and L-glutamate (20 mM) on nerve cords in the present experiments suggests that the kainate receptors in this preparation show a chemical selectivity comparable to that observed at vertebrate central neurones. The molar potencies, relative to L-glutamate, have been calculated from the present results (immobilization of cockroaches) and the sources indicated (arthropod skeletal muscle).

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