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The functional role of octopamine and tyramine during insect behaviour

Subject Area Molecular Biology and Physiology of Neurons and Glial Cells
Term from 2010 to 2014
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 151533341
 
In this research proposal the aim is to understand how insect behaviour is orchestrated by biogenic amines, and as an example we shall use the “pair” tyramine/octopamine. Octopamine and tyramine play important roles in modulating motor behaviour and, in general, octopamine changes the whole organism from a more static to a more dynamic state and is involved in aggression, foraging, social behaviour, learning and memory. We shall work with identified or type-characterized neurons and by recording from them study the precise timing of their activity during development and behaviour. In detail we shall firstly study descending tyraminergic/octopaminergic neurons of the brain with respect to their sensory inputs, their patterns of activity, their outputs, in order to reveal their connectivity. Secondly, we shall study tyraminergic/octopaminergic neurons under different behavioural conditions and, thus, reveal their respective tyramine/octopamine ratios which dramatically change during certain behaviours. Thirdly, we would like to study the specific effects of tyramine and octopamine on central networks. Fourthly, as we can identify tyraminergic/octopaminergic neurons and as we know the distribution of octopamine- and tyramine-immunoreactivity in different compartments, we would like to study the release mechanisms of these neurons and the functional differences between type I (motor) and type II (neuromodulatory) terminals including their ultrastructure.
DFG Programme Research Units
 
 

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