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Coordination of flipflopping neural signals and head turning during pheromone-mediated walking in a male silkworm moth Bombyx mori

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Abstract

Male silkworm moths, Bombyx mori, move their heads side-to-side during zigzag walking toward a source of sex pheromone. High-speed video analysis revealed that changes in walking direction were synchronized with this head turning. Thus the direction of the walking is indicated by the direction of the head turning. Head turning was regulated by neck motor neurons which innervate the cervical ventral muscles and the ventral muscles through the second cervical nerve. To determine the role of the `flipflop' state transition in spike activity carried by descending interneurons from the brain to the thoracic ganglion, we recorded pheromonal responses simultaneously from flipflop descending interneurons and a single cervical ventral 1 neck motor neuron. The activity of the cervical ventral 1 neck motor neuron was synchronized to that of the flipflop descending interneurons. The cervical ventral 1 neck motor neuron was morphologically identified using confocal imaging. Our results demonstrate that the flipflop signals play an important role in instructing turning signals during the pheromone-mediated behavior in a male B. mori.

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Accepted: 11 June 1998

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Mishima, T., Kanzaki, R. Coordination of flipflopping neural signals and head turning during pheromone-mediated walking in a male silkworm moth Bombyx mori. J Comp Physiol A 183, 273–282 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003590050255

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003590050255

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