A pheromone-sensitive trichoid sensillum complies to the general morphology of epithelial insect sensilla. A number of olfactory receptor neurons - in M. sexta there are two in each sensillum - is surrounded by a common set of accessory cells. These are the innermost thecogen, the trichogen, and the tormogen cell. While the thecogen cell forms a dendritic sheath around the inner and part of the outer dendritic segment, the other two constitute the receptor lymph cavity. 
The outer dendritic segment protrudes into the hair shaft, which - drawn to scale - would end just below your ceiling. Pores in the cuticle of the hair shaft allow the odorants to enter. The function of the pore tubules inserting at or near the pores is not completely understood. The liquid in hair shaft and receptor lymph cavity, the receptor lymph, contains a considerably higher K+ concentration than the hemolymph, together with an amazingly high concentration of pheromone-binding protein. 
While the first step in the chemo-electrical transduction, the generation of receptor potentials, very probably takes place at the outer dendrite, the origin of the action potentials is so far unknown. Their waveform in extracellular tip recordings together with the polarity of injected currents that elicit them, suggests a location of the action potential generator in the soma or axon region.


Last Update 5/7/99

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