Croll R P, Albuquerque T, Fitzpatrick L
Behav Neural Biol. 1987 Mar;47(2):212-8. doi: 10.1016/s0163-1047(87)90341-4.
Previous research suggests that gut distension by ingested bulk plays an important role in the regulation of food intake in gastropod molluscs. The present study tested whether the bilateral stomatogastric nerves which innervate the esophagus and crop in Pleurobranchaea form a neural pathway carrying information about gut distension to the central nervous system. The posterior branches of the paired stomatogastric nerves were surgically exposed and sectioned in seven experimental animals while the nerves were simply exposed and not sectioned in seven sham-operated control animals. In three, subsequent, daily feeding sessions, the experimental subjects consumed a greater amount of food in terms of percentage of body weight than the control subjects. The experimental animals also gained a greater percentage of body weight and later were found to contain much more food within their guts. The results support the hypothesis that stretch receptors which innervate the gut and which have axons in the stomatogastric nerves form an important negative feedback pathway for the control of feeding in the sea slug.
先前的研究表明,摄入的大量食物引起的肠道扩张在腹足纲软体动物的食物摄入量调节中起着重要作用。本研究测试了支配侧鳃海牛食管和嗉囊的双侧口胃神经是否形成一条将肠道扩张信息传递至中枢神经系统的神经通路。在七只实验动物中,通过手术暴露并切断成对的口胃神经后支,而在七只假手术对照动物中,仅暴露神经但不切断。在随后的三天每日喂食过程中,实验对象摄入的食物占体重的百分比高于对照对象。实验动物体重增加的百分比也更高,随后发现其肠道内含有更多的食物。这些结果支持了这样一种假说,即支配肠道且轴突位于口胃神经中的牵张感受器形成了控制海蛞蝓进食的重要负反馈通路。