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Neurosecretion XVII. Experimentally induced release of neurosecretory material by exocytosis in the insect Leucophaea maderae

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Summary

In the corpora cardiaca of the insect Leucophaea the administration of serotonin elicits ultrastructural features indicative of the extrusion of neurosecretory material by exocytosis. The response to the stimulus and the process of extrusion seem to occur at considerable speed. Nearly all of the 30 test animals, fixed at various intervals starting as early as 3 min after the injection of the drug, show granules captured at the moment of leaving the axon as well as fully exteriorized secretory material. The fact that many of these granules are much smaller than the typical neurosecretory type speaks for intracellular fragmentation of the latter prior to the discharge of this cellular product. After 25 min or more the extruded electron dense structures show signs of breakdown. The apparent speed of these phenomena accounts for the dearth of omega-type configurations observed in unstimulated specimens of this species. The possible relationship between the membrane phenomena involved in exocytosis and the transient protrusions of bounding membranes of neurosecretory granules described in earlier papers remains to be clarified.

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Supported by N.S.F. research grant BMS 74-12456

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Scharrer, B., Wurzelmann, S. Neurosecretion XVII. Experimentally induced release of neurosecretory material by exocytosis in the insect Leucophaea maderae . Cell Tissue Res. 190, 173–180 (1978). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00210046

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