Eight substances (histamine, compound 48/80, kallikrein, trypsin, papain, substance P, serotonin and platelet activating factor) were injected intradermally (volume 50 microl) into the rostral back (neck) of rats in order to establish an animal model for peripherally elicited pruritus. While serotonin induced excessive scratching at the site of injection, the other substances were weak or inactive. The dose-response relationship of serotonin was sigmoid, EC50=2.1 mg/ml (95% confidence interval: 1.0 to 4.3 mg/ml). Injections of serotonin 1 mg/ml into the caudal back elicited no scratching at all, i.e. neither at the site of injection nor elsewhere, so the experiment indicated no systemic effect of serotonin 1 mg/ml intradermally. Scratching was probably elicited histamine-independently, since histamine itself did not elicit scratching. The intra- and inter-observer variations were 3-4%. We conclude that serotonin is a reproducible local pruritogen eliciting scratching in the rat. The model may be useful in research and development of topical antipruritics of the nonhistaminic type as well as for various other purposes in pruritus research.
The tympanal organ of the migratory locust acquires its definitive form during larval development. All the receptor cells (90-100) are present in the 1st instar, whereas the differentiation of the tympanum and the cuticular structures it bears proceeds in steps from one instar to the next. The elevated process is the earliest such structure to appear (2nd instar); it is followed by the pyriform vesicle (3rd instar) and folded body (4th instar). The styliform body first appears in the imago. Although the typical arrangement of the receptor cells is already discernible in the 1st instar, some of the attachment sites change during development, the final configuration appearing only in the imago.
ABSTRACT. The course and projection areas of the tympanal receptor fibres in the thoracic ventral cord were revealed by iontophoresis in the last three larval instars. There were no significant differences between the arrangement in larvae and that in adults. The threshold curves of the auditory organ of the last three instars were measured by recording summed potentials in the tympanal nerve. In the frequency range tested (1–20 kHz), larvae and adults differed only in sensitivity. More detailed information was obtained by single‐cell recordings from receptor neurones in the tympanal nerve of last instar larvae. No differences could be shown between the threshold curves, or the suprathreshold activity, of low frequency receptors of last instars and adults. However, the high frequency receptors of the last instars are far less sensitive in the frequency range above 12 kHz. This seems to depend on the different mechanical properties of the tympanum in larvae. The response patterns of some typical ventralcord neurones (G‐, K‐, B‐type) were identified by extracellular single‐cell recordings in last instar larvae. Convergence of auditory and vibratory inputs onto the G‐neurone and the B‐neurone (as is known to exist in the adult) was found in larvae in the final and penultimate instars to be causing similar response patterns.
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