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1.
Although neuromodulation of synapses is extensively documented, its consequences in the context of network oscillations are not well known. We examine the modulation of synaptic strength and short-term dynamics in the crab pyloric network by the neuropeptide proctolin. Pyloric oscillations are driven by a pacemaker group which receives feedback through the inhibitory synapse from the lateral pyloric (LP) to pyloric dilator (PD) neurons. We show that proctolin modulates the spike-mediated and graded components of the LP to PD synapse. Proctolin enhances the graded component and unmasks a surprising heterogeneity in its dynamics where there is depression or facilitation depending on the amplitude of the voltage waveform of the presynaptic LP neuron. The spike-mediated component is influenced by the baseline membrane potential and is also enhanced by proctolin at all baseline potentials. In addition to direct modulation of this synapse, proctolin also changes the shape and amplitude of the presynaptic voltage waveform which additionally enhances synaptic output during ongoing activity. During ongoing oscillations, proctolin reduces the variability of cycle period but only when the LP to PD synapse is functionally intact. Using the dynamic clamp technique we find that the reduction in variability is a direct consequence of modulation of the LP to PD synapse. These results demonstrate that neuromodulation of synapses involves complex and interacting influences that target different synaptic components and dynamics as well as the presynaptic voltage waveform. At the network level, modulation of feedback inhibition can result in reduction of variability and enhancement of stable oscillatory output.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of stimulating the modulatory proctolin-containing neurons (MPNs) on the pyloric rhythm of the stomatogastric ganglion of the crab, Cancer borealis, were compared with those produced by exogenously applied proctolin. The effects of both MPN stimulation and proctolin applications depend on the preceding physiological state of the preparation. Both treatments increase the pyloric cycle frequency dramatically in preparations that are slowly cycling, but they have little or no effect on pyloric cycle frequency in preparations that are already rapidly cycling. MPN and proctolin produce maximal pyloric cycle frequencies of about 1.2 Hz, although much faster pyloric frequencies are possible. MPN stimulation and proctolin applications affect the number of impulses fired in each burst by pyloric network neurons. MPN's excitatory actions are longer lasting when a preparation is active than when it is quiescent before stimulation. These data suggest that many of MPN's physiological actions result from its release of proctolin. Small unitary postsynaptic potentials evoked by MPN stimulation in the lateral pyloric neuron may indicate the presence of a second neurotransmitter in MPN.  相似文献   

3.
Distinct motor patterns are selected from a multifunctional neuronal network by activation of different modulatory projection neurons. Subsets of these projection neurons can contain the same neuromodulator(s), yet little is known about the relative influence of such neurons on network activity. We have addressed this issue in the stomatogastric nervous system of the crab Cancer borealis. Within this system, there is a neuronal network in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) that produces many versions of the pyloric and gastric mill rhythms. These different rhythms result from activation of different projection neurons that innervate the STG from neighboring ganglia and modulate STG network activity. Three pairs of these projection neurons contain the neuropeptide proctolin. These include the previously identified modulatory proctolin neuron and modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1) and the newly identified modulatory commissural neuron 7 (MCN7). We document here that each of these neurons contains a unique complement of cotransmitters and that each of these neurons elicits a distinct version of the pyloric motor pattern. Moreover, only one of them (MCN1) also elicits a gastric mill rhythm. The MCN7-elicited pyloric rhythm includes a pivotal switch by one STG network neuron from playing a minor to a major role in motor pattern generation. Therefore, modulatory neurons that share a peptide transmitter can elicit distinct motor patterns from a common target network.  相似文献   

4.
The monoamines dopamine (DA), serotonin (5HT), and octopamine (Oct) can each sculpt a unique motor pattern from the pyloric network in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the spiny lobster Panulirus interruptus. In this paper we investigate the contribution of individual network components in determining the specific amine-induced cycle frequency. We used photoinactivation of identified neurons and pharmacological blockade of synapses to isolate the anterior burster (AB) and pyloric dilator (PD) neurons. Bath application of DA, 5HT, or Oct enhanced cycle frequency in an isolated AB neuron, with DA generating the most rapid oscillations and Oct the slowest. When an AB-PD or AB-2xPD subnetworks were tested, DA often reduced the ongoing cycle frequency, whereas 5HT and Oct both evoked similar accelerations in cycle frequency. However, in the intact pyloric network, both DA and Oct either reduced or did not alter the cycle frequency, whereas 5HT continued to enhance the cycle frequency as before. Our results show that the major target of 5HT in altering the pyloric cycle frequency is the AB neuron, whereas DA's effects on the AB-2xPD subnetwork are critical in understanding its modulation of the cycle frequency. Octopamine's effects on cycle frequency require an understanding of its modulation of the feedback inhibition to the AB-PD group from the lateral pyloric neuron, which constrains the pacemaker group to oscillate more slowly than it would alone. We have thus demonstrated that the relative importance of the different network components in determining the final cycle frequency is not fixed but can vary under different modulatory conditions.  相似文献   

5.
In the lobster Homarus, the 2 identified PS neurons have a strong suppressive modulatory effect on the activity of the pyloric network in the STG (Cazalets et al., 1990). In the present paper, we consider the effects of PS on individual pyloric neurons isolated from their partners in the network by cell photoinactivation and synaptic blockade. Three types of PS action are described: (1) a transient, EPSP-mediated depolarization of the PD, VD, and AB neurons; (2) a long-lasting hyperpolarization concomitant with a loss of oscillatory properties in the PD and LP neurons; (3) a long-lasting depolarization without modification of oscillatory properties in the PY and IC neurons. The various effects of PS on isolated pyloric cells were consistent with the overall effects of PS on the intact pyloric network.  相似文献   

6.
The pyloric network of the lobster stomatogastric ganglion is a prime example of an oscillatory neural circuit. In our previous study on the firing patterns of pyloric neurons we observed characteristic temporal structures termed 'interspike interval (ISI) signatures' which were found to depend on the synaptic connectivity of the network. Dopamine, a well-known modulator of the pyloric network, is known to affect inhibitory synapses so it might also tune the fine temporal structure of intraburst spikes, a phenomenon not previously investigated. In the recent work we study the DA modulation of ISI patterns of two identified pyloric neurons in normal conditions and after blocking their glutamatergic synaptic connections. Dopamine (10-50 microM) strongly regularizes the firing of the lateral pyloric (LP) and pyloric dilator (PD) neurons by increasing the reliability of recurrent spike patterns. The most dramatic effect is observed in the LP, where precisely replicated spike multiplets appear in a normally 'noisy' neuron. The DA-induced regularization of intraburst spike patterns requires functional glutamatergic inputs to the LP neuron and this effect cannot be mimicked by simple intracellular depolarization. Inhibitory synaptic inputs arriving before the bursts are important factors in shaping the intraburst spike dynamics of both the PD and the LP neurons. Our data reveal a novel aspect of chemical neuromodulation in oscillatory neural networks. This effect sets in at concentrations lower than those affecting the overall burst pattern of the network. The sensitivity of intraburst spike dynamics to preceding synaptic inputs also suggests a novel method of temporal coding in neural bursters.  相似文献   

7.
A pair of identified neuromodulatory neurons, the pyloric suppressor (PS) neurons, can individually and strongly modify the activity of the pyloric network in the stomatogastric nervous system of the lobster Homarus gammarus. The PS neurons are identified by the location of their somata in the inferior ventricular nerve, their axonal projections, and their effects on pyloric network activity in vitro. Discharge of a PS neuron evokes large EPSPs in the pyloric dilator (PD) neurons and a long-lasting cessation of rhythmic activity in the neurons that control movements of the pyloric filter: PD, lateral pyloric (LP), and pyloric (PY). This cessation of rhythmic activity can outlast by several 10s of seconds a brief discharge of PS lasting only a few seconds. The different neurons of the pyloric filter do not exhibit the same sensitivity to the suppressive effects of PS, with the LP neuron being the most sensitive. Tonic discharge in PS induces graded alterations in the pyloric pattern, depending on its firing frequency. At low (less than 5 Hz) discharge frequencies, PS provokes changes in phase relationships and duration of bursting in pyloric neurons. A slight increase in PS frequency suppresses the rhythmic activity of some pyloric neurons, resulting in a switch from a triphasic to a biphasic pattern. At higher (greater than 10 Hz) PS firing frequencies, rhythmic activity in all the pyloric neurons, including the pacemakers (PD, anterior burster), is abolished, except in cells (ventricular dilator, inferior cardiac) controlling the pyloric valve. We conclude that a central pattern generator is not only subject to activating modulatory control, but may also be the target of suppressive inputs that are themselves able to provoke functional reconfigurations of the network.  相似文献   

8.
The pyloric and gastric motor pattern-generating networks in the stomatogastric ganglion of the lobster Homarus gammarus are reconfigured into a new functional circuit by burst discharge in an identified pair of modulatory projection interneurons, originally named the pyloric suppressor (PS) neurons because of their inhibitory effects on pyloric network activity. Here we elucidate the actions of the PS neurons on individual members of the neighbouring gastric circuit, as well as describing their ability to alter synaptic coupling between the two networks. PS neuron firing has two distinct effects on gastric network activity: an initial short-lasting action mediated by transient inhibition of most gastric motoneurons, followed by a long-lasting circuit activation associated with a prolonged PS-evoked depolarization of the medial gastric (MG) motoneuron and the single network interneuron, Int1. These long-lasting effects are voltage-dependent, and experiments with hyperpolarizing current injection and photoablation suggest that excitation of both the MG neuron and Int1 is critical for PS-elicited gastric network rhythmicity. In parallel, PS neuron discharge persistently (lasting several minutes) enhances the strength of an inhibitory synaptic influence of the MG neuron on the pyloric dilator (PD)-anterior burster (AB) pacemaker neurons, thereby facilitating operational fusion of the two networks. Therefore, a single modulatory neuron may influence disparate populations of neurons via a range of very different and highly target-specific mechanisms: conventional transient synaptic drive and up- or down-modulation of membrane properties and synaptic efficacy. Moreover, distinctly different time courses of these actions allow different circuit configurations to be specified sequentially by a given modulatory input.  相似文献   

9.
The stomatogastric ganglion of the crab, Cancer borealis, is modulated by >20 different substances, including numerous neuropeptides. One of these peptides, proctolin, activates an inward current that shows strong outward rectification (Golowasch and Marder, 1992). Decreasing the extracellular Ca(2+) concentration linearizes the current-voltage curve of the proctolin-induced current. We used voltage clamp to study the currents evoked by proctolin and five additional modulators [C. borealis tachykinin-related peptide Ia (CabTRP Ia), crustacean cardioactive peptide, red pigment-concentrating hormone, TNRNFLRFamide, and the muscarinic agonist pilocarpine] in stomatogastric ganglion neurons, both in the intact ganglion and in dissociated cell culture. Subtraction currents yielded proctolin-like current-voltage relationships for all six substances, and the current-voltage curves of all six substances showed linearization in low external Ca(2+). The lateral pyloric neuron responded to all six modulators, but the ventricular dilator neuron only responded to a subset of them. Bath application of saturating concentrations of proctolin occluded the response to CabTRP and vice versa. N-(6-Aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-napthalensulfonamide, a calmodulin inhibitor, increased the amplitude and altered the voltage dependence of the responses elicited by CabTRP and proctolin. Together, these data indicate that all six substances converge onto the same voltage-dependent current, although they activate different receptors. Therefore, differential network responses evoked by these substances may primarily depend on the receptor distribution on network neurons.  相似文献   

10.
The phases at which network neurons fire in rhythmic motor outputs are critically important for the proper generation of motor behaviors. The pyloric network in the crustacean stomatogastric ganglion generates a rhythmic motor output wherein neuronal phase relationships are remarkably invariant across individuals and throughout lifetimes. The mechanisms for maintaining these robust phase relationships over the long-term are not well described. Here we show that tonic nanomolar dopamine (DA) acts at type 1 DA receptors (D1Rs) to enable an activity-dependent mechanism that can contribute to phase maintenance in the lateral pyloric (LP) neuron. The LP displays continuous rhythmic bursting. The activity-dependent mechanism was triggered by a prolonged decrease in LP burst duration, and it generated a persistent increase in the maximal conductance (G(max)) of the LP hyperpolarization-activated current (I(h)), but only in the presence of steady-state DA. Interestingly, micromolar DA produces an LP phase advance accompanied by a decrease in LP burst duration that abolishes normal LP network function. During a 1 h application of micromolar DA, LP phase recovered over tens of minutes because, the activity-dependent mechanism enabled by steady-state DA was triggered by the micromolar DA-induced decrease in LP burst duration. Presumably, this mechanism restored normal LP network function. These data suggest steady-state DA may enable homeostatic mechanisms that maintain motor network output during protracted neuromodulation. This DA-enabled, activity-dependent mechanism to preserve phase may be broadly relevant, as diminished dopaminergic tone has recently been shown to reduce I(h) in rhythmically active neurons in the mammalian brain.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of neuropeptides to modulate neural circuit activity is well established, but little is known regarding how the actions of neurally-released peptides are regulated. This issue is being studied in the isolated stomatogastric nervous system (STNS) of decapod crustaceans. The STNS is a small neural system that contains the rhythmically active gastric mill (chewing) and pyloric (filtering of chewed food) motor circuits within the stomatogastric ganglion (STG). These circuits are influenced by a set of modulatory projection neurons in the neighboring commissural and oesophageal ganglia. This system includes three different projection neurons that contain the peptide transmitter proctolin among an overlapping complement of cotransmitters. Despite their shared proctolinergic phenotype, when these projection neurons are activated individually each of them has distinct actions on the gastric mill and pyloric circuits. These distinct actions result only partly from the presence of different cotransmitters in these projection neurons. Also contributing to these distinct actions are differences in the pattern of transmitter release as well as a differential, peptidase-mediated sculpting of the actions of the proctolin released from each projection neuron. There is also a convergence of peptide cotransmitter actions, at the level of the target ion channel, which might limit the effectiveness of each individual cotransmitter. One lesson already learned from this small neural system is that there is a diverse collection of regulatory mechanisms for controlling the actions of neurally-released peptides on rhythmically active neural circuits.  相似文献   

12.
Phylogenetic comparison can reveal general principles governing the organization and neuromodulation of neural networks. Suitable models for such an approach are the pyloric and gastric motor networks of the crustacean stomatogastric ganglion (STG). These networks, which have been well studied in several species, are extensively modulated by projection neurons originating in higher-order ganglia. Several of these have been identified in different decapod species, including the paired modulatory proctolin neuron (MPN) in the crab Cancer borealis [Nusbaum & Marder (1989) J. Neurosci., 9,1501-1599; Nusbaum & Marder (1989), J. Neurosci., 9, 1600-1607] and the apparently equivalent neuron pair, called GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) neurons 1 and 2 (GN1/2), in the lobster Homarus gammarus [Cournil et al. (1990) J. Neurocytol., 19, 478-493]. The morphologies of MPN and GN1/2 are similar, and both exhibit GABA-immunolabelling. However, unlike MPN, GN1/2 does not contain the peptide transmitter proctolin. Instead, GN1/2, but not MPN, is immunoreactive for the neuropeptides related to cholecystokinin (CCK) and FLRFamide. Nonetheless, GN1/2 excitation of the lobster pyloric rhythm is similar to the proctolin-mediated excitation of the crab pyloric rhythm by MPN. In contrast, GN1/2 and MPN both use GABA but produce opposite effects on the gastric mill rhythm. While MPN stimulation produces a GABA-mediated suppression of the gastric rhythm [Blitz & Nusbaum (1999) J. Neurosci., 19, 6774-6783], GN1/2 activates or enhances gastric rhythmicity. These results highlight the care needed when generalizing neuronal organization and function across related species. Here we show that the 'same' neuron in different species does not contain the same neurotransmitter complement, nor does it exert all of the same effects on its postsynaptic targets. Conversely, a different transmitter phenotype is not necessarily associated with a qualitative change in the way that a modulatory neuron influences target network activity.  相似文献   

13.
Co-transmission is a common means of neuronal communication, but its consequences for neuronal signaling within a defined neuronal circuit remain unknown in most systems. We are addressing this issue in the crab stomatogastric nervous system by characterizing how the identified modulatory commissural neuron (MCN)1 uses its co-transmitters to activate the gastric mill (chewing) rhythm in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG). MCN1 contains gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) plus the peptides proctolin and Cancer borealis tachykinin-related peptide Ia (CabTRP Ia), which it co-releases during the retractor phase of the gastric mill rhythm to influence both retractor and protractor neurons. By focally applying each MCN1 co-transmitter and pharmacologically manipulating each co-transmitter action during MCN1 stimulation, we found that MCN1 has divergent co-transmitter actions on the gastric mill central pattern generator (CPG), which includes the neurons lateral gastric (LG) and interneuron 1 (Int1), plus the STG terminals of MCN1 (MCN1(STG)). MCN1 used only CabTRP Ia to influence LG, while it used only GABA to influence Int1 and the contralateral MCN1(STG). These MCN1 actions caused a slow excitation of LG, a fast excitation of Int1 and a fast inhibition of MCN1(STG). MCN1-released proctolin had no direct influence on the gastric mill CPG, although it likely indirectly regulates this CPG via its influence on the pyloric rhythm. MCN1 appeared to have no ionotropic actions on the gastric mill follower motor neurons, but it did use proctolin and/or CabTRP Ia to excite them. Thus, a modulatory projection neuron can elicit rhythmic motor activity by using distinct co-transmitters, with different time courses of action, to simultaneously influence different CPG neurons.  相似文献   

14.
Oscillatory networks underlie rhythmic behaviors (e.g., walking, chewing) and complex behaviors (e.g., memory formation, decision-making). Flexibility of oscillatory networks includes neurons switching between single- and dual-network participation, even generating oscillations at two distinct frequencies. Modulation of synaptic strength can underlie this neuronal switching. Here we ask whether switching into dual-frequency oscillations can also result from modulation of intrinsic neuronal properties. The isolated stomatogastric nervous system of male Cancer borealis crabs contains two well-characterized rhythmic feeding-related networks (pyloric, ∼1 Hz; gastric mill, ∼0.1 Hz). The identified modulatory projection neuron MCN5 causes the pyloric-only lateral posterior gastric (LPG) neuron to switch to dual pyloric/gastric mill bursting. Bath applying the MCN5 neuropeptide transmitter Gly1-SIFamide only partly mimics the LPG switch to dual activity because of continued LP neuron inhibition of LPG. Here, we find that MCN5 uses a cotransmitter, glutamate, to inhibit LP, unlike Gly1-SIFamide excitation of LP. Thus, we modeled the MCN5-elicited LPG switching with Gly1-SIFamide application and LP photoinactivation. Using hyperpolarization of pyloric pacemaker neurons and gastric mill network neurons, we found that LPG pyloric-timed oscillations require rhythmic electrical synaptic input. However, LPG gastric mill-timed oscillations do not require any pyloric/gastric mill synaptic input and are voltage-dependent. Thus, we identify modulation of intrinsic properties as an additional mechanism for switching a neuron into dual-frequency activity. Instead of synaptic modulation switching a neuron into a second network as a passive follower, modulation of intrinsic properties could enable a switching neuron to become an active contributor to rhythm generation in the second network.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Neuromodulation of oscillatory networks can enable network neurons to switch from single- to dual-network participation, even when two networks oscillate at distinct frequencies. We used small, well-characterized networks to determine whether modulation of synaptic strength, an identified mechanism for switching, is necessary for dual-network recruitment. We demonstrate that rhythmic electrical synaptic input is required for continued linkage with a “home” network, whereas modulation of intrinsic properties enables a neuron to generate oscillations at a second frequency. Neuromodulator-induced switches in neuronal participation between networks occur in motor, cognitive, and sensory networks. Our study highlights the importance of considering intrinsic properties as a pivotal target for enabling parallel participation of a neuron in two oscillatory networks.  相似文献   

15.
The pentapeptide proctolin has been localized previously to the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system and shown to modulate the rhythmic activity of the pyloric network in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) (Marder et al., 1986; Hooper and Marder, 1987). We have now identified a pair of modulatory proctolin-containing neurons (MPNs) that cause proctolin-like modulation of the pyloric rhythm. Individual MPNs were identified by combining intracellular Lucifer yellow dye injection with rhodamine-visualized proctolin immunolabeling. Both MPNs are located in the esophageal nerve and send processes to the STG. Current injection into one MPN influences the second MPN, suggesting that they are electrically coupled. The 2 MPNs have similar effects on the pyloric rhythm of the STG. Intracellular stimulation of a single MPN was sufficient to enhance already active pyloric rhythms and initiated the pyloric rhythm in quiescent preparations.  相似文献   

16.
In the stomatogastric nervous system of the crab, Cancer borealis, a set of 4 serotonergic/cholinergic proprioceptive neurons, called gastropyloric receptor (GPR) cells, have effects on the pyloric motor pattern. In a semi-intact foregut preparation, the GPR cells are not activated by movements of the pyloric filter; instead they respond to the slower movements of the gastric mill (Katz et al., 1989). Thus, their activity is not synchronized to the pyloric motor pattern. However, when the GPR cells are stimulated in an in vitro preparation in a manner that resembles their normal firing pattern, they produce dramatic effects on the pyloric motor pattern. These effects include: (1) a prolonged increase in the pyloric cycle frequency, (2) a momentary pause in the motor pattern, (3) transient inhibition of some motor neurons, (4) strong excitation of other motor neurons, and (5) altered phase relationships of the different components of the motor pattern. These changes in the motor pattern are due to direct effects of the GPR cells on neurons in the pyloric central pattern generator (CPG). All of the cells in the pyloric circuit appear to receive GPR input. However, only 2 neurons receive detectable rapid nicotinic synaptic potentials. The other neurons receive only slower neuromodulatory input from GPR stimulation. The neuromodulatory effects include burst enhancement, plateau potential enhancement, excitation, and inhibition. These modulatory effects are largely mimicked by bath-applied serotonin (5-HT). Thus, primary sensory neurons can alter the production of motor patterns by a CPG through a phase-independent mechanism; these proprioceptors do not need to fire at a precise time in the cycle to be effective because their effects are mediated through the slower actions of the neuromodulator 5-HT.  相似文献   

17.
Neuromodulatory effects can vary with their mode of transmission. Phasic release produces local and transient increases in dopamine (DA) up to micromolar concentrations. Additionally, since DA is released from open synapses and reuptake mechanisms are not nearby, tonic nanomolar DA exists in the extracellular space. Do phasic and tonic transmissions similarly regulate voltage-dependent ionic conductances in a given neuron? It was previously shown that DA could immediately alter the transient potassium current (I(A)) of identified neurons in the stomatogastric ganglion of the spiny lobster Panulirus interruptus. Here we show that DA can also persistently alter I(A), and that the immediate and persistent effects of DA oppose one another. The lateral pyloric (LP) neuron exclusively expresses type 1 DA receptors (D1Rs). Micromolar DA produces immediate depolarizing shifts in the voltage dependence of LP I(A), whereas tonic nanomolar DA produces a persistent increase in LP I(A) maximal conductance (G(max)) through a translation-dependent mechanism involving target of rapamycin (TOR). The pyloric dilator (PD) neuron exclusively expresses D2Rs. Micromolar DA produces an immediate hyperpolarizing shift in PD I(A) voltage dependence of activation, whereas tonic DA persistently decreases PD I(A) G(max) through a translation-dependent mechanism not involving TOR. The persistent effects on I(A) G(max) do not depend on LP or PD activity. These data suggest a role for tonic modulators in the regulation of voltage-gated ion channel number; and furthermore, that dopaminergic systems may be organized to limit the amount of change they can impose on a circuit.  相似文献   

18.
Graded chemical synaptic transmission is important for establishing the motor patterns produced by the pyloric central pattern generator (CPG) circuit of the lobster stomatogastric ganglion (Raper, 1979; Anderson and Barker, 1981; Graubard et al., 1983). We examined the modulatory effects of the amines dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), and octopamine (Oct) on graded synaptic transmission at all the central chemical synapses made by the pyloric dilator (PD) neuron onto its follower cells, using synaptic input-output curves measured from cell somata. DA strongly reduced the graded synaptic strength at all the PD synapses. DA reduction of chemical synaptic strength from PD onto the inferior cardiac (IC) neuron could change the sign of synaptic interaction between these 2 cells from inhibitory to excitatory by uncovering a weak electrical connection. 5-HT had weaker and more variable effects, reducing graded synaptic strength from the PD onto the lateral pyloric and pyloric neurons and enhancing the weak synapse from the PD to the IC cell. Oct strongly enhanced the graded synaptic strength at all the PD central synapses. Oct enhancement of graded synaptic strength between the PD and IC cells could also change the sign of the interaction: weak, excitatory electrical coupling, which was sometimes dominant before Oct, was masked by the enhanced chemical inhibitory interaction during Oct application. Measurements of electrical coupling between 2 PD cells and between 2 postsynaptic cells suggest that Oct does not change the input resistance of these cells and may act directly at the PD synapses. The effects of DA and 5-HT are most easily explained by their general reductions in pre- and postsynaptic input resistance. DA, 5-HT, and Oct each produce a distinct pyloric motor pattern (Flamm and Harris-Warrick, 1986a). These amine-induced motor patterns may be explained by the unique actions of each amine on the intrinsic membrane properties of different pyloric CPG neurons (Flamm and Harris-Warrick, 1986b) and by modulation of graded synaptic transmission between the pyloric neurons.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We have studied the effects of groups I, II, and III metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) agonists and antagonists on pyloric activity in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus. We have found that agonists for all three groups of mGluRs modify the pyloric output. The group I agonist, l-quisqualic acid (l-QA), activated the pyloric central pattern generator (CPG). When the pyloric rhythm was partially suppressed by sucrose-block of input fibers in the stomatogastric nerve (stn), l-QA accelerated the rhythmic activity. In addition, the number of spike discharges was increased in pyloric motoneurons: pyloric (PY), and lateral pyloric (LP). In completely blocked preparations, a slow pyloric rhythm was initiated by l-QA. Groups II and III agonists exerted an inhibitory effect on pyloric activity. The group II agonist, (2S,1'S,2'S)-2-(Carboxycyclopropyl)glycine (L-CCG-I), decreased both the frequency of the pyloric rhythm and the number of spike discharges in the motoneurons: ventricular dilator (VD), PY, and LP. The effects of L-CCG-I were dose-dependent. The group III agonist, l-(+)-2-Amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (l-AP4), slightly decreased the frequency of the pyloric rhythm and suppressed spike discharges in the VD neuron. All effects of mGluR agonists were reversible. The effect of l-QA was blocked by the broad spectrum mGluR antagonist (S)-Methyl-4-carboxyphenylglycine (MCPG). The inhibitory effect of L-CCG-I was prevented by MCPG and by the group II/III mGluR antagonist (RS)-alpha-Methyl-4-phosphonophenylglycine (MPPG), and was partially blocked by the group II mGluR antagonist (RS)-1-amino-5-phosphonoindan-1-carboxylic acid (APICA). The inhibitory effect of l-AP4 was blocked by MPPG and partially blocked by APICA.  相似文献   

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