Morphology and physiology of the olfactory system of blood-feeding insects

F. Guidobaldi , I.J. May-Concha , P.G. Guerenstein
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引用次数: 46

Abstract

Several blood-feeding (hematophagous) insects are vectors of a number of diseases including dengue, Chagas disease and leishmaniasis which persistently affect public health throughout Latin America. The vectors of those diseases include mosquitoes, triatomine bugs and sandflies. As vector control is an efficient way to prevent these illnesses it is important to understand the sensory biology of those harmful insects. We study the physiology of the olfactory system of those insects and apply that knowledge on the development of methods to manipulate their behavior. Here we review some of the latest information on insect olfaction with emphasis on hematophagous insects. The insect olfactory sensory neurons are housed inside hair-like organs called sensilla which are mainly distributed on the antenna and mouthparts. The identity of many of the odor compounds that those neurons detect are already known in hematophagous insects. They include several constituents of host (vertebrate) odor, sex, aggregation and alarm pheromones, and compounds related to egg-deposition behavior. Recent work has contributed significant knowledge on how odor information is processed in the insect first odor-processing center in the brain, the antennal lobe. The quality, quantity, and temporal features of the odor stimuli are encoded by the neural networks of the antennal lobe. Information regarding odor mixtures is also encoded. While natural mixtures evoke strong responses, synthetic mixtures that deviate from their natural counterparts in terms of key constituents or proportions of those constituents evoke weaker responses. The processing of olfactory information is largely unexplored in hematophagous insects. However, many aspects of their olfactory behavior are known. As in other insects, responses to relevant single odor compounds are weak while natural mixtures evoke strong responses. Future challenges include studying how information about odor mixtures is processed in their brain. This could help develop highly attractive synthetic odor blends to lure them into traps.

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吸血昆虫嗅觉系统的形态学和生理学
若干吸血昆虫是若干疾病的媒介,包括登革热、恰加斯病和利什曼病,这些疾病持续影响整个拉丁美洲的公共卫生。这些疾病的传播媒介包括蚊子、锥蝽和白蛉。由于病媒控制是预防这些疾病的有效方法,因此了解这些有害昆虫的感觉生物学非常重要。我们研究这些昆虫嗅觉系统的生理学,并将这些知识应用于开发操纵它们行为的方法。本文综述了昆虫嗅觉的最新研究进展,重点介绍了食血昆虫的嗅觉。昆虫的嗅觉感觉神经元被安置在毛发状的器官中,称为感受器,主要分布在触角和口器上。这些神经元检测到的许多气味化合物的特性在吸血昆虫中已经为人所知。它们包括宿主(脊椎动物)气味、性别、聚集和报警信息素的几种成分,以及与产卵行为有关的化合物。最近的工作对昆虫大脑中第一个气味处理中心——触角叶——如何处理气味信息做出了重要的贡献。气味刺激的质量、数量和时间特征由触角叶的神经网络编码。有关气味混合物的信息也被编码。虽然天然混合物引起强烈的反应,但在关键成分或这些成分的比例方面偏离天然混合物的合成混合物引起的反应较弱。在吸血昆虫中,嗅觉信息的处理在很大程度上尚未被探索。然而,它们嗅觉行为的许多方面是已知的。与其他昆虫一样,对相关单一气味化合物的反应很弱,而天然混合物则会引起强烈的反应。未来的挑战包括研究关于气味混合物的信息是如何在大脑中处理的。这可能有助于开发出极具吸引力的合成气味混合物,以引诱它们进入陷阱。
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来源期刊
Journal of Physiology-Paris
Journal of Physiology-Paris 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
2.02
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Each issue of the Journal of Physiology (Paris) is specially commissioned, and provides an overview of one important area of neuroscience, delivering review and research papers from leading researchers in that field. The content will interest both those specializing in the experimental study of the brain and those working in interdisciplinary fields linking theory and biological data, including cellular neuroscience, mathematical analysis of brain function, computational neuroscience, biophysics of brain imaging and cognitive psychology.
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