Abstract

Retrocerebral glandular complexes of Teleogryllus commodus (Orthoptera : Gryllidae) and Periplaneta americana (Dictyoptera : Blattidae) were examined for 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin)-immunoreactive (5-HTi) neurons. In Teleogryllus, a prominent tract of 5-HTi axons crosses the ventral surface of the corpus allatum (CA) from nervus corporis allati 1 (NCA 1), and seems to end at varicosities in NCA 2. Serotoninergic axons within this tract pass cephalad to the corpus cardiacum (CC), which also contains numerous, fine 5-HTi branches. 5-HTi axons originate anteriorly, presumably from the pars intercerebralis (PI) and pars lateralis (PL) of the brain. This is suggested by absence of immunoreactivity at the NCA 2-subesophageal ganglion junction, by intense immunofluorescence of the nervi corporis cardiaci (NCC) 1 and 2, by the presence of 5-HTi perikarya in PI and PL, and by previous data obtained by backfilling NCA 1 and 2. In Periplaneta, 5-HTi varicosities are rare in the CA, but abound in the NCA 2, and in NCC 1, 2, and 3. A few 5-HTi fibers project anteriorly from NCA 2 into the cap-like junction of CA and CC, and some traverse the CA to enter the postallatal nerves. Large, 5-HTi axons of NCC 3 ramify within the CC, while others contribute to an anterior branch of NCA 2. As in Teleogryllus, it is unlikely that 5-HTi fibers in NCA 2 originate from somata in the subesophageal ganglion. When cobalt staining and serotonin immunocytochemistry were combined to stain subesophageal neurons of Periplaneta, 5-HTi somata could not be paired with those back-filled via NCA 2. Conspicuous 5-HTi tracts between NCA 2 and the CC of Teleogryllus have no counterpart in Periplaneta.

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