The formaldehyde fluorescence technique has been used to demonstrate amine‐specific fluorescence in the nervous system of three nematode species, Prionchulus punclatus Cobb, Panagrellus redivivus Goodey, and Aphelenchus avenae Bastian. Examination of some of the physical and chemical properties of this fluorescence has shown it to be due principally to the primary catecholamine dopamine. Dopamine and dopa decarboxylase were also detected biochemically in A. avenae. Dopamine has now been proposed as a putative neurotransmitter in a number of nematode species and the role of this and other biogenic amines in nematodes is discussed. Of the two principal enzymes involved in the metabolism of monoamines, catechol‐O‐methyltransferase was detected in both A. avenae and P. redivivus but monoamine oxidase could not be detected in these or other nematode species.
SUMMARYColour changes that occur during tanning of intact and puncturedGlobodera rostochiensisfemales and of isolated cuticle are described. Experiments with catechol and enzyme inhibitors show that the tanning enzyme, a phenoloxidase, is located in the cuticle, soluble in aqueous media and relatively abundant. Substrate for the enzyme is limited in the cuticle. Pseudocoelomic fluid of yellow females promoted tanning and contains either phenolic substrate(s) for the enzyme or part of a biochemical system responsible for release of the substrate. The substrate or biochemical system is thermolabile. Apparently, the tanning enzyme and its substrate(s) are partitioned in living females but the partitioning breaks down after death and the cuticle tans to form the cyst.
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