Abstract

The arrangement of anatomically separated systems for information about general and pheromone odorants is well documented at the initial levels of the olfactory pathway both in vertebrates and insects. In the primary olfactory center of the moth brain, for example, a few enlarged glomeruli situated dorsally, at the entrance of the antennal nerve, are devoted to information about female-produced substances whereas a set of more numerous ordinary glomeruli (OG) receives input about general odorants. Heliothine moths are particularly suitable for studying central chemosensory mechanisms not only because of their anatomically separated systems for plant odors and pheromones but also due to their use of female-produced substances in communication across the species. Thus, the male-specific system of heliothine moths includes two sub-arrangements, one ensuring attraction and mating behavior by carrying information about pheromones released by conspecifics, and the other inhibition of attraction via signal information emitted from heterospecifics. Based on previous tracing experiments, a general chemotopic organization of the male-specific glomeruli has been demonstrated in a number of heliothine species. As compared to the well explored organization of the moth antennal lobe (AL), demonstrating a non-overlapping representation of the biologically relevant stimuli, less is known about the neural arrangement residing at the following synaptic level, i.e., the mushroom body calyces and the lateral horn. In the study presented here, we have labeled physiologically characterized antennal-lobe projection neurons in males of the two heliothine species, Heliothis virescens and Helicoverpa assulta, for the purpose of mapping their target regions in the protocerebrum. In order to compare the representation of plant odors, pheromones, and interspecific signals in the higher brain regions of each species, we have created standard brain atlases and registered three-dimensional models of distinct uniglomerular projection neuron types into the relevant atlas.

Highlights

  • Since the identification of the first pheromone, bombykol— produced by the Bombyx mori female (Butenandt et al, 1959), moths have been widely used for exploring how neural pathways encode olfactory information

  • In order to compare the position of olfactory neurons carrying information about pheromones vs. plant odors, models of the male brain were required both in H. virescens and H. assulta

  • Using the iterative shape averaging (ISA) procedure, we here present standard atlases of the central brains of the two heliothine species serving as a framework for comparing the final target regions of stained projection neurons obtained from different individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Since the identification of the first pheromone, bombykol— produced by the Bombyx mori female (Butenandt et al, 1959), moths have been widely used for exploring how neural pathways encode olfactory information. The olfactory sensory neurons of the moth are situated on the antennae and project directly to the antennal lobe (AL), the primary olfactory center of the brain. Male moths possess a large number of sensory neurons tuned to female-produced pheromones. These male-specific neurons, housed in long hair sensilla, target a small number of enlarged glomeruli situated dorsally in the AL at the entrance of the antennal nerve, the so-called macroglomerular complex (MGC; Boeckh and Boeckh, 1979; Matsumoto and Hildebrand, 1981; Kanzaki and Shibuya, 1986). The sensory neurons tuned to general odors, present in both sexes and situated in short hair sensilla, project to the numerous ordinary glomeruli (OG). The medial antennal-lobe tract (mALT; Ito et al, 2014), is the most

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