 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2003, 23(4):1109
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Central Modulatory Neurons Control Fuel Selection in Flight
Muscle of Migratory Locust
Tim
Mentel1,
Carsten
Duch1,
Heike
Stypa2,
Gerhard
Wegener2,
Uli
Müller1, and
Hans-Joachim
Pflüger1
1 Institute of Biology/Neurobiology, Free
University Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany, and 2 Institute
of Zoology, Department of Molecular Physiology, Johannes-Gutenberg
University, 55099 Mainz, Germany
 |
ABSTRACT |
Insect flight is one of the most intense and energy-demanding
physiological activities. High carbohydrate oxidation rates are
necessary for take-off, but, to spare the limited carbohydrate reserves, long-distance flyers, such as locusts, soon switch to lipid
as the main fuel. We demonstrate that before a flight, locust muscles
are metabolically poised for take-off by the release of octopamine from
central modulatory dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neurons, which
increases the levels of the potent glycolytic activator fructose
2,6-bisphosphate in flight muscle. Because DUM neurons innervating the
flight muscles are active during rest but selectively inhibited during
flight, they stimulate carbohydrate catabolism during take-off but tend
to decrease muscle glycolysis during prolonged flight. cAMP-dependent
protein kinase A is necessary but not sufficient for signal
transduction, suggesting parallel control via a calcium-dependent
pathway. Locust flight is the first reported instance of a direct and
specific involvement of neuronal activity in the control of muscle
glycolysis in working muscle during exercise.
Key words:
insect; octopamine; metabolism; motor behavior; glycolysis; neuromuscular system; modulation
 |
Introduction |
In flying locusts, the ATP-turnover
rate in flight muscles is increased ~100-fold compared with rest.
Carbohydrate is a major fuel early in flight, but during prolonged
flight, the muscles soon switch to oxidizing lipids to spare limited
carbohydrate stores (Wegener, 1996 ; Candy et al., 1997 ). Locusts are
formidable long-distance flyers, as demonstrated by monitoring swarms
with satellites (Krall et al., 1997 ). Prolonged flight requires two main metabolic adjustments. First, lipids must be made available. Lipid
mobilization is induced by increasing hemolymph levels of adipokinetic
hormones (Van der Horst, 1990 ; Van der Horst et al., 2001 ). Second,
catabolism in working flight muscles must shift from carbohydrate to
fat oxidation. This requires a yet unknown specific mechanism to
decrease glycolytic flux, because locusts still have considerable
carbohydrate stores after 30 min of flight, when carbohydrate oxidation
has dropped to <10% of the initial rate (Jutsum and Goldsworthy,
1976 ). The main control element of glycolysis is phosphofructokinase
(PFK), which is inhibited by physiological concentrations of ATP and
activated by AMP (Wegener et al., 1987 ). However, the levels of these
effectors in muscle change only during the first 2 sec after take-off
but remain constant thereafter, as demonstrated by
31P nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR) spectroscopy (Wegener et al., 1991 ). Therefore, they do not cause
the decreased PFK activity during prolonged flight. In contrast, the
levels of another potent activator of PFK, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate
(F2,6P2), decrease by 80% within 10 min of
flight (Wegener et al., 1986 ). F2,6P2 acts
synergistically with AMP in activating PFK and is neither a substrate
nor an intermediate of any metabolic pathway, but rather an
intracellular messenger responding to extracellular signals. The
important question, how F2,6P2 is controlled
during exercise, remains unanswered for vertebrate and insect muscle (Wegener, 1996 ; Krause and Wegener, 1996 ; Wegener and Krause, 2002 ).
In isolated perfused locust flight muscle, F2,6P2
levels are increased within 5 min by octopamine (Blau et al., 1994 ),
and injection of high doses of octopamine neutralizes flight-induced decrease in F2,6P2 (Blau and Wegener, 1994 ).
After 10 min of flight, octopamine levels in flight muscles are
decreased, whereas hemolymph octopamine is increased (Goosey and Candy,
1980 , 1982 ; Orchard et al., 1993 ). Therefore, octopamine and
F2,6P2 in flight muscle are correlated also
in vivo, and octopamine levels in working flight muscle are
controlled independently of hemolymph octopamine. The only source for
octopamine release onto flight muscles is central dorsal unpaired
median (DUM) modulatory neurons with bilaterally symmetrical
projections on both sides of the body. DUM neuron terminals are
surrounded by tight glial sheaths, suggesting precise release onto
muscles and effective compartmentalization between muscle and hemolymph
octopamine (Rheuben, 1995 ). DUM neurons innervating wing muscles are
active in resting locusts but are inhibited during flight (Duch and
Pflüger, 1999 ). We show that DUM neuron activity increases
F2,6P2 levels in resting flight muscles, thus
preparing them for high glycolytic rates, as required for take-off.
Conversely, inhibition of DUM neurons during flight corresponds to
decreased muscle octopamine levels, most likely contributing to
decreased glycolysis during prolonged flight.
 |
Materials and Methods |
Animals. Adult locusts (Locusta
migratoria) of either sex were taken from a crowded laboratory
colony at the Free University of Berlin.
Stimulation of DUM neurons innervating flight muscles.
Because of their bilaterally symmetrical projection patterns, DUM
neurons innervate all six major flight muscles on both sides of the
thorax. Because no other efferent thoracic neuron shows bilaterally
symmetrical projections, DUM neurons can be stimulated selectively,
thus inducing octopamine release onto specific flight muscles without
stimulating the motoneurons innervating these muscles. To test whether
octopamine release from DUM neurons affected flight muscle metabolism,
DUM neurons were stimulated antidromically, and the content of
F2,6P2 was measured in one of the three wing
elevator muscles, M119, according to Albrecht (1953) . Stimulations were
conducted in restrained semi-intact preparations. Animals were fixed in
plasticine dorsal side up, and the thorax was dissected open along the
dorsal midline. The gut was removed, and the electrodes for
extracellular recording and stimulation were placed at selected nerves.
To induce octopamine release on M119 on one side only, nerve 4 was cut
on one side, and the four DUM neurons innervating M119 were stimulated
antidromically via their axons with a suction electrode (see Fig.
1A, stimulation electrode 1). This induced octopamine
release onto muscle M119 on the contralateral side to the stimulation
electrode. The denervated M119 on the ipsilateral side to the
stimulation electrode served as internal control (see Fig.
1A). Individual pulses of 3 nA amplitude and 0.1 msec
duration were applied every second for 20 min. Successful stimulation
was monitored by recording the DUM neuron spikes extracellularly with a
hook electrode from the contralateral uncut nerve 4 (see Fig.
1A).
To induce release of octopamine onto M119 on both sides of the thorax
without affecting the motoneurons to M119, DUM neurons were stimulated
antidromically via nerve 3 with a suction electrode (see Fig.
1A, stimulation electrode 2). Antidromic stimulation of nerve 3 elicited spikes in all four DUM neurons innervating M119,
because they all possess axonal projections in nerve 3 and in nerve 4 (Kutsch and Schneider, 1987 ).
After stimulation, the muscles M119 were removed from both sides
(experimental and control muscle). For enzymatic detection of the
content of F2,6P2, muscles were frozen in liquid
nitrogen within 15-20 sec after electrical stimulation and
subsequently treated as described below. For in vitro
phosphorylation assays, muscles were frozen onto the tip of a steel
pestle that had been cooled in liquid nitrogen. Then the pestle with
the frozen muscle on its tip was placed into a microcapillary of 1 mm
inner diameter (100 µl disposable micropipettes; Blaubrand) that
contained 20 µl of frozen Tris-HCl buffer (50 mM), pH 7.5, at the opposite end. The muscle was
crushed inside the microcapillary without thawing by tipping the steel
pestle on the surface of the frozen buffer. After crushing,
microcapillaries were stored in liquid nitrogen until phosphorylation
assays were conducted as described below.
Assay of F2,6P2. To prevent the
degradation of F2,6P2 (which is very labile at
low pH but stabile in alkali), frozen flight muscles were swiftly
homogenized in 10 parts (v/w) of 20 mM NaOH by
sonication. The homogenate was incubated at 80°C for 5 min, and then
centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 15 min.
F2,6P2 was assayed in the supernatant on the
basis of its ability to activate the pyrophosphate-dependent PFK
(PPi-PFK), which we had purified from potato
tubers according to Van Schaftingen et al. (1982) .
PPi-PFK is strongly activated by
F2,6P2, whereas other activators of animal PFKs
have virtually no effect on the enzyme. A standard curve of
PPi-PFK activity versus 0.1-1.0
nM F2,6P2 was used for the readings (Van Schaftingen, 1984 ).
In vitro phosphorylation assay. PKA activity in flight
muscle M119 (see Fig. 1A) was measured by a fast
in vitro phosphorylation assay using phosphatase inhibitor 1 (I-1) as a PKA substrate (Hildebrandt and Müller, 1995 ). In
initial experiments, we confirmed that I-1 purified from bovine brain
is a specific substrate for cAMP-dependent protein kinase of locust
muscle. For the phosphorylation assay, samples (10 µl) in the
microcapillaries were thawed and, just before complete melting, plunged
into the phosphorylation mixture (10 µl), which comprised 1 µCi
[ -32P]ATP (5000 Ci/mmol), 20 µM ATP, 1 mM EGTA, 10 mM mercaptoethanol in 50 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, and an aliquot of the heat stable I-1 (1 µg),
boiled for 2 min before use. After incubation for 80 sec at room
temperature (20°C), reactions were stopped by adding 6 µl of sample
buffer (0.25 M Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, containing 5%
mercaptoethanol, 5% SDS, 20% glycerol, and 0.1% bromphenol
blue). SDS-PAGE and autoradiography were performed as described by
Hildebrandt and Müller (1995) . Autoradiographs were scanned, and
the density of both the PKA-specific I-1 band and the bands of the
intrinsic proteins were determined using NIH Image. In each sample, the 32P incorporation into the PKA-specific
substrate I-1 was normalized with respect to the total
32P incorporation into intrinsic proteins
(because of other kinase activities) [see Fig. 2A,
black arrow (for 32P
incorporation into PKA-specific substrate), white arrowhead (for 32P incorporation into intrinsic
proteins)].
Injections into muscle M119. In some experiments, chemicals
were injected into flight muscle M119 with a Hamilton syringe (20 µl of a 10 3 M
solution in DMSO of the PKA inhibitor KT5720 or 8-bromo-cAMP; Calbiochem, San Diego, CA). Contralateral control muscles were injected
with similar volumes of DMSO (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Flight muscles are
compact, with thickly packaged muscle bundles. If a dye is injected
into such a muscle, it quickly spreads within the muscle but does not
easily travel to adjacent muscles.
 |
Results |
Activity of DUM neurons increases the levels of F2,6P2
in flight muscle
DUM neurons are modulatory neurons intimately involved in insect
flight (Orchard et al., 1993 ; Duch and Pflüger, 1999 ). They supply the flight muscles and affect contraction kinetics but do not
trigger contraction. We tested whether activity of DUM neurons
supplying flight muscles also affected muscle metabolism and fuel
selection. After unilateral denervation, DUM neurons were stimulated
antidromically at 1 Hz for 20 min to induce octopamine release on the
wing elevator muscle M119 on one side only (Fig. 1A). The contralateral
M119 served as internal control (Fig. 1A, stimulation
electrode 1). The levels of F2,6P2 in flight
muscle were increased by the activity of DUM neurons, demonstrating for the first time a direct and specific involvement of central modulatory neurons in the control of glycolysis and hence fuel selection in muscle
during exercise. The stimulation frequency of 1 Hz is at
the upper range of the firing frequencies recorded from semi-intact locust preparations during rest (Duch and Pflüger, 1999 ). The content of F2,6P2 in muscles showed individual
variation, both in the stimulated and unstimulated flight muscles.
However, in all cases stimulation markedly increased the content of
F2,6P2 in flight muscle compared with the
unstimulated control muscle (Fig. 1B). Thus DUM
neuron activity produced a highly significant increase in the content
of F2,6P2, which was sevenfold on average (paired
Student's t test; p < 0.001). This showed
that DUM neuron activity in preflight locusts would be sufficient to
maintain high levels of F2,6P2, thus keeping the
flight muscles poised for high glycolytic activity and hence ready for
starting a flight.

View larger version (47K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Effects of DUM neuron activity on the glycolytic
activator F2,6P2 in flight muscle. A,
Schematic drawing of the stimulation protocol. The four cell bodies of
the DUM neurons to the flight muscles M119 are represented by
black circles; their axons are represented by
straight lines. After denervating the right flight
muscle M119, stimulation via electrode 1 induces octopamine release
from DUM neurons onto the left M119 only (see Results and Figs.
1B, 2A,B). Stimulation
success is recorded on the left nerve 4. Stimulating nerve 3 without
cutting nerve 4 induces octopamine release on the muscles M119 on both
sides (see Results, Figs. 2C, 3). B, The
content of F2,6P2 in nanomoles per gram of fresh weight
(g fw) in flight muscle M119 is increased by DUM
neuron activity (gray bars; stimulation via
nerve 4 at 1 Hz for 20 min) compared with the contralateral control
muscle from the same locust (black bars). Means + SDs are shown on the right. (t test;
n = 29; *p < 0.001).
|
|
In contrast, the previously measured decreases in octopamine and
F2,6P2 in active flight muscles (Goosey and
Candy, 1982 ; Wegener et al., 1986 ) correspond to the inhibition of DUM
neurons during flight (Duch and Pflüger, 1999 ). Because all other
effectors of PFK are unchanged during flight, decreases in
F2,6P2 will attenuate glycolytic flux, as has
been shown in an enzyme assay with PFK purified from locust flight
muscle (Wegener et al., 1986 , 1987 ).
Activity of DUM neurons increases PKA activity in
flight muscle
We also tested whether the metabolic effect of DUM neuron activity
was mediated by the same second messengers that mediate presynaptic
and postsynaptic modulatory effects of octopamine on muscle
contraction kinetics (Evans and Robb, 1993 ). At least two types of
octopamine receptors have been described on locust skeletal muscles.
They either increase intracellular calcium via the
IP3 pathway or increase cAMP through adenylate
cyclase activity, the latter activating PKA (Evans and Robb, 1993 ).
With the same stimulation patterns as before, we followed PKA activity
with substrate phosphorylation assays (Fig.
2A). DUM neuron
activity significantly increased PKA activity in the flight muscle M119 (Fig. 2A,B). Injections of the cAMP donor
bromo-8-cAMP into nonstimulated muscles had an effect on PKA activity
that was similar to that seen for stimulations of DUM neurons (Fig.
2B). Stimulating DUM neurons via nerve 3 induced
octopamine release on M119 on both sides of the body (see Materials and
Methods) (Fig. 1A). In such preparations, injections
of the PKA inhibitor KT5720 into one of the two M119 flight muscles
decreased PKA activity in that muscle significantly (Fig.
2B,C) (Student's t test;
p < 0.001) and thus abolished the effect of DUM neuron
stimulation on PKA activity (Fig. 2B,C).

View larger version (44K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
DUM neuron activity increases PKA activity in
flight muscles. A, Phosphorylation assay for PKA
activity in flight muscle M119 on the control (left) and
on the experimental side (right). The band for
32P incorporation into the PKA-specific substrate I-1 is
marked with a black arrow; the band for 32P
incorporation into intrinsic proteins is marked with a white
arrowhead. B, Bar diagram showing the effects of
DUM neuron activity (A1, muscle M119 affected by DUM
neuron activity; A2, control) and of an injected cAMP
donor (B1, injected 8-bromo-cAMP; B2,
sham injected with DMSO) on PKA activity in flight muscle M119. The
increase in PKA activity mediated by DUM neuron activity
(C1, muscle M119 affected by DUM neuron activity and
injected with DMSO) is abolished by injections of the PKA inhibitor
KT5720 (C2, muscle M119 affected by DUM neuron activity
after injection of KT5720). Means + SDs are given, with
asterisks indicating significant differences.
(t test; p < 0.01).
|
|
PKA is necessary but not sufficient for signal transduction from
octopamine to F2,6P2
We also tested whether the PKA pathway was necessary to mediate
the effect of DUM neuron activity on F2,6P2
content in flight muscle. DUM neurons were stimulated via nerve 3 (Fig.
1A, stimulation 2), with no nerves cut, so that
octopamine was released on the muscles M119 on both sides. Before
stimulation, one M119 was injected with the PKA blocker KT5720; the
contralateral one was injected with DMSO (control). After stimulation,
the muscles injected with KT5720 contained significantly less
F2,6P2 (p < 0.01) than
the control muscles (Fig. 3A),
demonstrating that the cAMP-PKA pathway was necessary for signal
transduction. To test whether increased PKA activity was sufficient to
increase F2,6P2 in muscle without DUM neuron
stimulation, the cAMP donor bromo-8-cAMP was injected in M119 on one
side only. The content of F2,6P2 was measured in both muscles M119 from the same locusts after 20 min. Although PKA
activity was thus increased pharmacologically to a similar degree as by
DUM neuron stimulation (Fig. 2B), this was not
sufficient to increase F2,6P2 in muscle M119
(Fig. 3B), indicating that a parallel pathway was involved
in signal transduction from octopamine to F2,6P2.
Given the octopamine receptor complement of locust flight muscles
(Evans and Robb, 1993 ), this is likely to be the IP3-calcium-dependent pathway. Whether both
pathways are coupled to different receptor subtypes or whether the same
octopamine receptor is coupled to different second messenger systems
remains an open question (Robb et al., 1994 ).

View larger version (45K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
The cAMP-PKA pathway is necessary but not
sufficient for DUM neuron activity-mediated increases in
F2,6P2. A, DUM neurons were stimulated
antidromically for 20 min with 1 Hz so that octopamine was released on
M119 on both sides of the thorax. Injection of the PKA inhibitor KT5720
attenuated the effect of DUM neuron activity to increase the levels of
F2,6P2 in nanomoles per gram of fresh weight
(g fw) in muscle M119 (white
bars) compared with control injections with DMSO (black
bars). B, Injection of the cAMP donor
8-bromo-cAMP (white bars) into muscles that were not
affected by DUM neuron activity did not increase the content of
F2,6P2 compared with control injected muscles (black
bars). Means + SDs of experiments in A
and B are shown in bar diagrams on the
right (t test; *p < 0.01).
|
|
 |
Discussion |
It has long been known that muscle contraction triggered by the
activity of motoneurons stimulates muscle catabolism. The balance of
hydrolysis and resynthesis of ATP is controlled by intracellular
feedback mechanisms in which ATP and its degradation products are
involved (for review, see Wegener, 1996 ). In contrast, little is known
as to the role of the nervous system in muscle metabolism during exercise.
Our results show that locust muscle catabolism can be affected by the
activity of central modulatory neurons, which in turn are directly
connected to the central neural circuits that produce flight motor
output (Duch and Pflüger, 1999 ). In semi-intact preparations of
locusts, DUM neurons that innervate flight muscles fire with
frequencies between 0.1 and 1 Hz during rest (Duch and Pflüger,
1999 ). This study shows that a firing rate of 1 Hz is sufficient to
maintain high levels of F2,6P2 in flight muscle. However, in resting locusts this will not trigger glycolytic activity, because F2,6P2 acts synergistically with AMP in
activating PFK (Wegener et al., 1987 ), and the AMP content is very low
in resting muscle (Wegener et al., 1991 ). As a consequence, preflight
DUM neuron activity keeps the flight muscles poised for high glycolytic activity as required for take-off without wasting carbohydrate. With
the onset of a flight, however, ATP turnover is increased dramatically,
and this will cause an instantaneous increase in AMP in the working
muscles (Wegener et al., 1991 ). In concert with high levels of
F2,6P2, this rapid increase in AMP will then ensure high glycolytic rates, as required for take-off (Candy et al.,
1997 ).
In contrast, inhibition of DUM neurons during flight (Duch and
Pflüger, 1999 ) will allow octopamine levels in flight muscles to
decrease, because this is the only octopaminergic innervation that they
receive. In fact, such a decrease in octopamine in locust flight
muscles does occur within the first 10 min of a flight (Goosey and
Candy, 1982 ), despite increased hemolymph octopamine levels (Goosey and
Candy, 1980 ). Decreased octopamine levels in flight muscle would
be expected to also decrease F2,6P2 levels in
muscle, which in fact have been shown to decrease by 80% within the
first 10 min of a flight (Wegener et al., 1986 ). With the other
effectors of PFK unchanged, as demonstrated by NMR spectroscopy (Wegener et al., 1991 ), this will attenuate glycolytic flux, and correspondingly favor oxidizing lipids during prolonged flight. DUM
neuron activity during flight would be expected to counteract the
decrease in F2,6P2. In fact, this hypothesis is
supported by reports that the decrease in F2,6P2
in working flight muscles can be reverted by injecting octopamine in
flying locusts (Blau and Wegener, 1994 ) or incubating electrically
stimulated flight muscles with octopamine (Blau et al., 1994 ).
Therefore, we conclude that DUM neuron inhibition during flight (Duch
and Pflüger, 1999 ) may be part of the mechanism to reduce
glycolytic flux to favor the oxidation of fat during prolonged flight.
Central modulatory neurons hence appear to contribute to adjusting
flight muscle metabolism to the preferential oxidation of carbohydrates
(muscle glycogen and hemolymph trehalose) for take-off. Such a direct
control of muscle metabolism by modulatory neurons has not been
demonstrated before. This underlines the increasing awareness that the
appropriate control of behavior requires numerous interactions between
the nervous system and other organs as well as the environment.
Neuromodulators, such as octopamine, are also released within the CNS,
and central neurons are equipped with the appropriate sets of
receptors. As Robertson and Steele (1973) have observed octopamine to
mobilize glycogen in isolated cockroach ganglia, this prompts the
question as to whether neuromodulators also support neurons to meet
changing catabolic demands.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 17, 2002; revised Nov. 22, 2002; accepted Nov. 24, 2002.
This study was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Grants Pf
128/13-1 (T.M.), DU 331/2-2 (C.D.), We 494/10-2 (G.W.), SFB 515,C3
(U.M.), and SFB 515, B6 (H.-J.P.). We thank Dr. R. B. Levine (ARL
Division of Neurobiology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ) for
helpful suggestions on this manuscript.
T.M. and C.D. contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Carsten Duch, Institute of
Biology/Neurobiology, Free University Berlin, Koenigin-Luise Strasse 28-30, 14195 Berlin, Germany. E-mail:
duch{at}neurobiologie.fu-berlin.de.
 |
References |
-
Albrecht FO
(1953)
In: The anatomy of the migratory locust. London: Athlone.
-
Blau C,
Wegener G
(1994)
Metabolic integration in locust flight: the effect of octopamine on the glycolytic activator fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in flight muscle in vivo.
J Comp Physiol [B]
164:11-15.
-
Blau C,
Wegener G,
Candy DJ
(1994)
The effect of octopamine on the glycolytic activator fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in perfused locust flight muscle.
Insect Biochem Mol Biol
24:677-683.
-
Candy DJ,
Becker A,
Wegener G
(1997)
Coordination and integration of metabolism in insect flight.
Comp Biochem Physiol [B]
117:497-512.
-
Duch C,
Pflüger HJ
(1999)
DUM neurons in locust flight: a model system for amine-mediated peripheral adjustments to a central motor program.
J Comp Physiol [A]
184:489-499.
-
Evans PD,
Robb S
(1993)
Octopamine receptor subtypes and their modes of action.
Neurochem Res
18:869-874[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Goosey MW,
Candy DJ
(1980)
The D-octopamine content of the hemolymph of the locust, Schistocerca americana gregaria, and its elevation during flight.
Insect Biochem
10:393-397.
-
Goosey MW,
Candy DJ
(1982)
The release and removal of octopamine by tissues of the locust Schistocerca americana gregaria.
Insect Biochem
12:681-685.
-
Hildebrandt H,
Müller U
(1995)
Octopamine mediates rapid stimulation of protein kinase A in the antennal lobe of honeybees.
J Neurobiol
27:44-50[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Jutsum AR,
Goldsworthy GJ
(1976)
Fuels for flight in Locusta.
J Insect Physiol
22:243-249.
-
Krall S,
Peveling R,
Ba-Diallo D
(1997)
In: New strategies in locust control. Basel: Birkhäuser.
-
Krause U,
Wegener G
(1996)
Control of glycolysis in vertebrate skeletal muscle during exercise.
Am J Physiol
270:R821-R829[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kutsch W,
Schneider H
(1987)
Histological characterization of neurones innervating functionally different muscles of Locusta.
J Comp Neurol
261:515-528[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Orchard I,
Ramirez JM,
Lange AB
(1993)
A multifunctional role for octopamine in locust flight.
Annu Rev Entomol
38:227-249[Web of Science].
-
Rheuben MB
(1995)
Specific associations of neurosecretory or neuromodulatory axons with insect skeletal muscle.
Am Zool
35:566-577.
-
Robb S,
Cheek TR,
Hannan FL,
Hall LM,
Midgley JM,
Evans PD
(1994)
Agonist-specific coupling of a cloned Drosophila octopamine/tyramine receptor to multiple second messenger systems.
EMBO J
13:1325-1330[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Robertson HA,
Steele JE
(1973)
Effect of monophenolic amines on glycogen metabolism in the nerve cord of the American cockroach, Periplaneta americana.
Insect Biochem
3:53-59.
-
Van der Horst DJ
(1990)
Lipid transport functions of lipoproteins in flying insects.
Biochim Biophys Acta
1047:195-211[Medline].
-
Van der Horst DJ,
Van Marrewijk WJA,
Diederen HB
(2001)
Adipokinetic hormones of insects: release, signal transduction, and responses.
Int Rev Cytol
211:179-240[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Van Schaftingen E
(1984)
D-Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate.
In: Methods of enzymatic analysis, Vol 6: Metabolites 1: carbohydrates (Bergmeyer HU,
Bergmeyer J,
Grassl M,
eds), pp 335-341. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley.
-
Van Schaftingen E,
Lederer B,
Bartrons R,
Hers H-G
(1982)
A kinetic study of pyrophosphate: fructose 6-phosphate phosphotransferase from potato tubers.
Eur J Biochem
129:191-195[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Wegener G
(1996)
Flying insects: model systems in exercise physiology.
Experientia
52:404-412[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Wegener G,
Krause U
(2002)
Different modes of activating phosphofructokinase, a key regulatory enzyme of glycolysis, in working vertebrate muscle.
Biochem Soc Trans
30:264-270[Medline].
-
Wegener G,
Michel R,
Newsholme EA
(1986)
Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate as a signal for changing from sugar to lipid oxidation during flight in locusts.
FEBS Lett
201:129-132.
-
Wegener G,
Beinhauer I,
Klee A,
Newsholme EA
(1987)
Properties of locust muscle 6-phosphofructokinase and their importance in the regulation of glycolytic flux during prolonged flight.
J Comp Physiol [B]
157:315-326.
-
Wegener G,
Bolas NM,
Thomas AAG
(1991)
Locust flight metabolism studied in vivo by 31P NMR spectroscopy.
J Comp Physiol [B]
161:247-256.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/2341109-05$05.00/0
Related articles in J. Neurosci.:
- This Week in The Journal
J. Neurosci. 2003 23: 0.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
B. Brembs, F. Christiansen, H. J. Pfluger, and C. Duch
Flight Initiation and Maintenance Deficits in Flies with Genetically Altered Biogenic Amine Levels
J. Neurosci.,
October 10, 2007;
27(41):
11122 - 11131.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
G Kamp, H Schmidt, H Stypa, S Feiden, C Mahling, and G Wegener
Regulatory properties of 6-phosphofructokinase and control of glycolysis in boar spermatozoa
Reproduction,
January 1, 2007;
133(1):
29 - 40.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
D. Wicher, H.-J. Agricola, S. Sohler, M. Gundel, S. H. Heinemann, L. Wollweber, M. Stengl, and C. Derst
Differential Receptor Activation by Cockroach Adipokinetic Hormones Produces Differential Effects on Ion Currents, Neuronal Activity, and Locomotion
J Neurophysiol,
April 1, 2006;
95(4):
2314 - 2325.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
D. Bucher
CARBS OR FAT? NERVE CELLS THAT CONTROL GLYCOLYSIS IN LOCUST FLIGHT MUSCLES
J. Exp. Biol.,
July 1, 2003;
206(13):
2094 - 2094.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|