Abstract

The ultrastructures of the retractor muscles of Gene's organs in the cattle ticksBoophilus microplus andAmblyomma variegatum are described. The innervation, neuromuscular junctions, and insertions of the muscles are also described. The retractor muscles are important in controlling the actions of Gene's organ, the egg waxing organ in ticks, during oviposition in the female. The ultrastructural features of the muscles are typical of arthropod muscles, and the nerve terminals at the neuromuscular junctions contain small electron lucent synaptic vesicles with a diameter of 50 nm, and also larger dense core vesicles with a diameter of 100 nm. Evidence is presented implicatingl-glutamate andl-aspartate as putative excitatory transmitters at the tick neuromuscular junction. The excitatory post-synaptic potentials recorded in the muscles were abolished in the presence of low concentrations ofl-glutamic acid andl-aspartic acid, but were unaffected by acetyl-choline, 4-aminobutyric acid and octopamine, suggesting that glutamic acid and aspartic acid interact with receptors on the muscle membrane.

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