An identified glutamatergic interneuron patterns feeding motor activity via both excitation and inhibition

1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 945-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Quinlan ◽  
K. Gregory ◽  
A. D. Murphy

1. Previously we demonstrated that glutamate is an important neurotransmitter in the CNS of Helisoma. Exogenous glutamate applied to the buccal ganglia mimicked both the excitatory and inhibitory effects of subunit 2 (S2) of the tripartite central pattern generator (CPG) on S2 postsynaptic motor neurons. Here we identify buccal interneuron B2 as an S2 interneuron by utilizing a combination of electrophysiology, pharmacology, and intracellular staining. In addition, neurons that were electrophysiologically and morphologically characterized as neuron B2 demonstrated antiglutamate immunoreactivity, suggesting that neuron B2 is a source of endogenous glutamate in the buccal ganglia. 2. Depolarization of neuron B2 evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials in motor neurons excited by S2. The excitatory effects of B2 depolarization and S2 activation were reversibly antagonized by the ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitro-quinoxaline-2,3-dione, similar to the antagonism shown previously for application of exogenous glutamate. Depolarization of neuron B2 also evoked inhibitory postsynaptic potentials in motor neurons inhibited by S2. When such motor neurons were maintained in isolated cell culture, application of exogenous glutamate produced a direct hyperpolarization of the membrane potential. 3. The activity of neuron B2 is necessary for the production of the standard pattern of buccal motor neuron activity, which underlies functional feeding movements. The subunits of the tripartite buccal CPG must be active in the temporal sequence S1-S2-S3 to produce the standard feeding pattern. Rhythmic inhibition from neuron B2 terminated activity in S1 postsynaptic motor neurons and entrained the frequency of activity in S3 postsynaptic motor neurons. Hyperpolarization of neuron B2 disrupted the production of the standard motor pattern by eliminating S2 postsynaptic potentials in identified buccal motor neurons, thereby prolonging S1 activity and disrupting S3 bursting. 4. These data support the hypothesis that S2 neuron B2 is glutamatergic and demonstrate that glutamatergic transmission, and especially inhibition, is fundamental to the production of behaviorally critical motor neuron activity patterns in Helisoma.

1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 561-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Quinlan ◽  
A. D. Murphy

1. The mechanism for generating diverse patterns of buccal motor neuron activity was explored in the multifunctional central pattern generator (CPG) of Helisoma. The standard pattern of motor neuron activity, which results in typical feeding behavior, consists of three distinct phases of buccal motor neuron activity. We have previously identified CPG interneurons that control the motor neuron activity during phases 1 and 2 of the standard pattern. Here we identify a pair of interneurons responsible for buccal motor neuron activity during phase 3, and examine the variability in the interactions between this third subunit and other subunits of the CPG. 2. During the production of the standard pattern, phase 3 excitation in many buccal motor neurons follows a prominent phase 2 inhibitory postsynaptic potential. Therefore phase 3 excitation was previously attributed to postinhibitory rebound (PIR) in these motor neurons. Two classes of observations indicated that PIR was insufficient to account for phase 3 activity, necessitating phase 3 interneurons. 1) A subset of identified buccal neurons is inhibited during phase 3 by discrete synaptic input. 2) Other identified buccal neurons display discrete excitation during both phases 2 and 3. 3. A bilaterally symmetrical pair of CPG interneurons, named N3a, was identified and characterized as the source of phase 3 postsynaptic potentials in motor neurons. During phase 3 of the standard motor pattern, interneuron N3a generated bursts of action potentials. Stimulation of N3a, in quiescent preparations, evoked a depolarization in motor neurons that are excited during phase 3 and a hyperpolarization in motor neurons that are inhibited during phase 3. Hyperpolarization of N3a during patterned motor activity eliminated both phase 3 excitation and inhibition. Physiological and morphological characterization of interneuron N3a is provided to invite comparisons with possible homologues in other gastropod feeding CPGs. 4. These data support a model proposed for the organization of the tripartite buccal CPG. According to the model, each of the three phases of buccal motor neuron activity is controlled by discrete subsets of pattern-generating interneurons called subunit 1 (S1), subunit 2 (S2), and subunit 3 (S3). The standard pattern of buccal motor neuron activity underlying feeding is mediated by an S1-S2-S3 sequence of CPG subunit activity. However, a number of "nonstandard" patterns of buccal motor activity were observed. In particular, S2 and S3 activity can occur independently or be linked sequentially in rhythmic patterns other than the standard feeding pattern. Simultaneous recordings of S3 interneuron N3a with effector neurons indicated that N3a can account for phase-3-like postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) in nonstandard patterns. The variety of patterns of buccal motor neuron activity indicates that each CPG subunit can be active in the absence of, or in concert with, activity in any other subunit. 5. To explore how CPG activity may be regulated to generate a particular motor pattern from the CPG's full repertoire, we applied the neuromodulator serotonin. Serotonin initiated and sustained the production of an S2-S3 pattern of activity, in part by enhancing PIR in S3 interneuron N3a after the termination of phase 2 inhibition.


1985 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1517-1534 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Robertson ◽  
L. I. Mortin ◽  
J. Keifer ◽  
P. S. Stein

A turtle with a complete transection of the spinal cord, termed a spinal turtle, exhibits three types or “forms” of the scratch reflex: the rostral scratch, pocket scratch, and caudal scratch (21). Each scratch form is elicited by tactile stimulation of a site on the body surface innervated by afferents entering the spinal cord caudal to the transection. We recorded electromyographic (EMG) potentials from the hindlimb during each of the three forms of the scratch in the spinal turtle (see Fig. 1). Common to all scratch forms is the rhythmic alternation of the activity of the hip protractor muscle (VP-HP) and hip retractor muscle (HR-KF). Each form of the scratch displays a characteristic timing of the activity of the knee extensor muscle (FT-KE) with respect to the cycle of activity of the hip muscles VP-HP and HR-KF. In a rostral scratch, activation of FT-KE occurs during the latter portion of VP-HP activation. In a pocket scratch, activation of FT-KE occurs during HR-KF activation. In a caudal scratch, activation of FT-KE occurs after the cessation of HR-KF activation. The timing characteristics of these muscle activity patterns correspond to the timing characteristics of changes in the angles of the knee joint and the hip joint obtained with movement analyses (21). We recorded electroneurographic (ENG) potentials from peripheral nerves of the hindlimb during each of the three forms of the “fictive” scratch in the spinal turtle immobilized with neuromuscular blockade (see Fig. 4). Common to all forms of the fictive scratch is the rhythmic alternation of the activity of hip protractor motor neurons (VP-HP) and hip retractor motor neurons (HR-KF). Each form displays a characteristic timing of the activity of knee extensor motor neurons (FT-KE) with respect to the cycle of VP-HP and HR-KF motor neuron activity. The timing characteristics of these motor neuron activity patterns are similar to the timing characteristics of the muscle activity patterns obtained in the preparation with movement (cf. Figs. 1 and 4). The motor pattern for each scratch form is generated centrally within the spinal cord. In the spinal immobilized preparation, neuromuscular blockade prevents both limb movement and phasic sensory input, and complete spinal transection isolates the cord from supraspinal input.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2004 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 2380-2384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul S. G. Stein ◽  
Susan Daniels-McQueen

Agonist motor neurons usually alternate between activity and quiescence during normal rhythmic behavior; antagonist motor neurons are usually active during agonist motor neuron quiescence. During an antagonist deletion, a naturally occurring motor-pattern variation, there is no antagonist activity and no quiescence between successive bursts of agonist activity. Motor neuron recordings of normal fictive rostral scratching in the turtle displayed rhythmic alternation between activity and quiescence for hip flexors, knee flexors, and knee extensors. Knee-flexor activity occurred during knee-extensor quiescence. During a hip-extensor deletion, a variation of rostral scratching, rhythmic hip-flexor bursts occurred without intervening hip-flexor quiescence. There were 3 distinct patterns of knee motor activity during the cycle before or after a hip-extensor deletion. In most cycles, there was knee flexor-extensor rhythmic alternation. In some cycles, termed knee-flexor deletions, there was no knee-flexor activity and rhythmic knee-extensor bursts occurred without intervening knee-extensor quiescence. In other cycles, termed knee-extensor deletions, there was no knee-extensor activity and rhythmic knee-flexor bursts occurred without intervening knee-flexor quiescence. The concept of a module refers to a population of motor neurons and interneurons with similar activity patterns; interneurons in a module coordinate agonist and antagonist motor neuron activities, either with excitation of agonist motor neurons and interneurons, or with inhibition of antagonist motor neurons and interneurons. Previous studies of hip-extensor deletions support the concept of a rhythmogenic hip-flexor module. The knee-related deletions described here support the concept of rhythmogenic knee-flexor and knee-extensor modules linked by reciprocal inhibition.


2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 2983-2991 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Norris ◽  
Adam L. Weaver ◽  
Angela Wenning ◽  
Paul S. García ◽  
Ronald L. Calabrese

The central pattern generator (CPG) for heartbeat in leeches consists of seven identified pairs of segmental heart interneurons and one unidentified pair. Four of the identified pairs and the unidentified pair of interneurons make inhibitory synaptic connections with segmental heart motor neurons. The CPG produces a side-to-side asymmetric pattern of intersegmental coordination among ipsilateral premotor interneurons corresponding to a similarly asymmetric fictive motor pattern in heart motor neurons, and asymmetric constriction pattern of the two tubular hearts: synchronous and peristaltic. Using extracellular techniques, we recorded, in 61 isolated nerve cords, the activity of motor neurons in conjunction with the phase reference premotor heart interneuron, HN(4), and another premotor interneuron that allowed us to assess the coordination mode. These data were then coupled with a previous description of the temporal pattern of premotor interneuron activity in the two coordination modes to synthesize a global phase diagram for the known elements of the CPG and the entire motor neuron ensemble. These average data reveal the stereotypical side-to-side asymmetric patterns of intersegmental coordination among the motor neurons and show how this pattern meshes with the activity pattern of premotor interneurons. Analysis of animal-to-animal variability in this coordination indicates that the intersegmental phase progression of motor neuron activity in the midbody in the peristaltic coordination mode is the most stereotypical feature of the fictive motor pattern. Bilateral recordings from motor neurons corroborate the main features of the asymmetric motor pattern.


1979 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 1223-1232 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Shapiro ◽  
J. Koester ◽  
J. H. Byrne

1. A behavioral and electrophysiological analysis of defensive ink release in Aplysia californica was performed to examine the response of this behavior and its underlying neural circuit to various-duration noxious stimuli. 2. Three separate behavioral protocols were employed using electrical shocks to the head as noxious stimuli to elicit ink release. Ink release was found to be selectively responsive to longer duration stimuli, and to increase in a steeply graded fashion as duration is increased. 3. Intracellular stimulation of ink motor neurons revealed that ink release is a linear function of motor neuron spike train duration, indicating that the selective sensitivity of the behavior to long-duration stimuli is not due to a nonlinearity in the glandular secretory process. 4. In contrast, electrophysiological examination of ink motor neuron activity in response to sustained head shock revealed an accelerating spike train. During the later part of the spike train, compound excitatory synaptic potentials show a positive shift in reversal potential. 5. Our results suggest a central locus for the mechanisms that determine sensitivity of inking behavior to stimulus duration. 6. In contrast to ink release, defensive gill withdrawal was found to be extremely sensitive to short-duration stimuli.


1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 1394-1403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edelle C. Field ◽  
Paul S. G. Stein

Field, Edelle C. and Paul S. G. Stein. Spinal cord coordination of hindlimb movements in the turtle: intralimb temporal relationships during scratching and swimming. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 1394–1403, 1997. Spinal cord neuronal circuits generate motor neuron activity patterns responsible for rhythmic hindlimb behaviors such as scratching and swimming. Kinematic analyses of limb movements generated by this motor neuron output reveal important characteristics of these behaviors. Intralimb kinematics of the turtle hindlimb were characterized during five distinct rhythmic forms of behavior: three forms of scratching and two forms of swimming. In each movement cycle for each form, the angles of the hip and knee joints were measured as well as the timing of a behavioral event, e.g., rub onset in scratching or powerstroke onset in swimming. There were distinct differences between the kinematics of different forms of the same behavior, e.g., rostral scratch versus pocket scratch. In contrast, there were striking similarities between forms of different behaviors, e.g., rostral scratch versus forward swimming. For each form of behavior there was a characteristic angular position of the hip at the onset of each behavioral event (rub or powerstroke). The phase of the onset of knee extension within the hip position cycle occurred while the hip was flexing in the rostral scratch and forward swim and while the hip was extending in the pocket scratch, caudal scratch, and back-paddling form of swimming. The phase of the onset of the behavioral event was not statistically different between rostral scratch and forward swim; nor was it different between pocket scratch and caudal scratch. These observations of similarities at the movement level support the suggestion that further similarities, such as shared spinal circuitry, may be present at the neural circuitry level as well.


1983 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 1481-1503 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Jahan-Parwar ◽  
S. M. Fredman

The extrinsic buccal muscles in Aplysia are responsible for the overall protraction and retraction of the buccal mass during feeding. The six pairs of extrinsic muscles are organized into two groups, consisting of three protractors and three retractors. Insights into how the extrinsic muscles are controlled were obtained by examining the organization of the motor neurons that innervated them. The extrinsic buccal muscles are innervated by cerebral ganglion nerves and neurons. All the muscles examined appear to be multiply innervated. Identified neurons in the cerebral B, E, and G clusters were found to be motor neurons for individual extrinsic muscles. Some extrinsic muscles had both excitatory and inhibitory innervation. Two synergistic muscles, the extrinsic ventrolateral protractor (ExVLP) and the extrinsic dorsal protractor (ExDP), had common excitatory innervation by identified neuron E5. Two antagonistic muscles, the ExVLP and the extrinsic ventral retractor (ExVR), also had common innervation. Identified neuron E1 appeared to be an inhibitory motor neuron for the ExVLP but an excitatory motor neuron for the ExVR. Common innervation provides a simple mechanism for coordinating synergistic and antagonistic extrinsic muscles. On the basis of these data, a model for the control of buccal mass protraction and retraction is proposed. Bursting by extrinsic buccal muscles was coordinated with cyclic activity in the intrinsic muscles of the buccal mass. Antagonistic extrinsic muscles burst antiphasically and synergistic extrinsic muscles burst in phase when the buccal mass was fully protracted and exhibited a series of rhythmic contractions. Additionally, cerebral E cluster neurons burst in phase with stereotyped rhythmic buccal motor neuron discharges recorded from buccal nerves. The cerebral E cluster motor neurons were coordinated by common synaptic input. No monosynaptic connections were observed; homologous neurons in each E cluster received synaptic input with similar but not identical timing, indicating that the interneurons that coordinate the homologous motor neurons are synchronized. The source of the rhythm that drives synaptically mediated cerebral extrinsic muscle motor neuron bursting was in the buccal ganglia. Cutting one cerebral-buccal connective eliminated E neuron bursting on that side but had no effect on homologous neurons on the intact side. This suggests that a single oscillator in the buccal ganglia may coordinate both the extrinsic and intrinsic buccal muscles during feeding.


1985 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Paul ◽  
B. Mulloney

We describe a type of nonspiking premotor local interneuron (interneuron IA) in the abdominal nervous system of Pacifasticus leniusculus. All of its branches are restricted to one side of the midline. These interneurons are identifiable and occur as bilateral pairs, one neuron on each side of abdominal ganglia 3, 4, and 5. The membrane potential of interneuron IA oscillated in phase with the swimmeret rhythm, a motor pattern generated in each of these ganglia, because the neuron received postsynaptic potentials in phase with the rhythm. Sustained hyperpolarization of an individual interneuron IA initiated generation of the swimmeret rhythm in all the ganglia of a quiescent nervous system. Sustained depolarization stopped the swimmeret rhythm in all the active ganglia of a nervous system that was generating the rhythm. Currents injected into one interneuron reset the rhythm. Comparisons of the shapes of the IA interneurons in different ganglia showed that they are similar to each other and distinct from other local interneurons in these ganglia. Interneuron IA has a large integrative segment and relatively few branches that are largely restricted to the lateral neuropil, to which all other kinds of swimmeret neurons also project. We conclude that this interneuron occurs only once in each hemiganglion in abdominal segments 3, 4, and 5, and that it is identifiable. Furthermore, this interneuron is an essential component of the circuit in each hemiganglion that generates the swimmeret rhythm. The interneuron was dye coupled to a particular identifiable motor neuron and not to any other neurons. The motor neuron was not dye-coupled to any other local interneurons. The ability of this motor neuron to reset the rhythm is attributed to its being electrically coupled to interneuron IA in its ganglion.


2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (4) ◽  
pp. 2120-2136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Itay Hurwitz ◽  
Irving Kupfermann ◽  
Klaudiusz R. Weiss

Consummatory feeding movements in Aplysia californica are organized by a central pattern generator (CPG) in the buccal ganglia. Buccal motor programs similar to those organized by the CPG are also initiated and controlled by the cerebro-buccal interneurons (CBIs), interneurons projecting from the cerebral to the buccal ganglia. To examine the mechanisms by which CBIs affect buccal motor programs, we have explored systematically the synaptic connections from three of the CBIs (CBI-1, CBI-2, CBI-3) to key buccal ganglia CPG neurons (B31/B32, B34, and B63). The CBIs were found to produce monosynaptic excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) with both fast and slow components. In this report, we have characterized only the fast component. CBI-2 monosynaptically excites neurons B31/B32, B34, and B63, all of which can initiate motor programs when they are sufficiently stimulated. However, the ability of CBI-2 to initiate a program stems primarily from the excitation of B63. In B31/B32, the size of the EPSPs was relatively small and the threshold for excitation was very high. In addition, preventing firing in either B34 or B63 showed that only a block in B63 firing prevented CBI-2 from initiating programs in response to a brief stimulus. The connections from CBI-2 to the buccal ganglia neurons showed a prominent facilitation. The facilitation contributed to the ability of CBI-2 to initiate a BMP and also led to a change in the form of the BMP. The cholinergic blocker hexamethonium blocked the fast EPSPs induced by CBI-2 in buccal ganglia neurons and also blocked the EPSPs between a number of key CPG neurons within the buccal ganglia. CBI-2 and B63 were able to initiate motor patterns in hexamethonium, although the form of a motor pattern was changed, indicating that non-hexamethonium-sensitive receptors contribute to the ability of these cells to initiate bursts. By contrast to CBI-2, CBI-1 excited B63 but inhibited B34. CBI-3 excited B34 and not B63. The data indicate that CBI-1, -2, and -3 are components of a system that initiates and selects between buccal motor programs. Their behavioral function is likely to depend on which combination of CBIs and CPG elements are activated.


1984 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 1375-1393 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Eisen ◽  
E. Marder

During motor activity of the pyloric system of the lobster stomatogastric ganglion, there are rhythmic alternations between activity in the pyloric dilator (PD) and pyloric (PY) motor neurons. We studied the phase relations between PD motor neuron activity and PY motor neuron activity in preparations cycling at a wide range of frequencies and after altering the activity of the PD neurons. The PY neurons fall into two classes, early (PE) and late (PL) (21), distinguished by the different phases in the pyloric cycle at which they fire. The phase at which PE neurons fired and the phase at which PL neurons fired was independent of pyloric cycle frequency over a range of frequencies from 0.5 to 2.25 Hz. The anterior burster (AB) interneuron is electrically coupled to the PD motor neurons. Together the AB and PD neurons form the pacemaker for the pyloric system. Synchronous depolarization of the AB and PD neurons evokes a complex inhibitory post-synaptic potential (IPSP) in PY neurons. This IPSP has two components: an early, AB neuron-derived component and a late, PD neuron-derived component. Deletion of the PD neurons from the pyloric circuit by photoinactivation removed the PD-evoked component of the pacemaker-evoked IPSP. This resulted in a decrease in the duration of the IPSP evoked by pacemaker depolarization and a significant advance in the firing phase of PY neurons. Bath application of dopamine was used to hyperpolarize and inhibit the PD neurons (30), causing them to release less neurotransmitter. As a consequence, the duration of the IPSP evoked by pacemaker depolarization was decreased and the firing phase of the PY neurons was significantly advanced. Stimulation of the inferior ventricular nerve (IVN) produces a slow excitation of the PD neurons (30), causing them to release more neurotransmitter. Consequently, the duration of the IPSP evoked by pacemaker depolarization was increased and the firing phase of the PY neurons was significantly retarded for several cycles of pyloric activity following IVN stimulation. Thus, modulation of the strength of PD-evoked inhibition in PY neurons is responsible for altering the firing phase of the PY neurons with respect to the pyloric pacemaker. We suggest that frequency of the pyloric output and the phase relations of the elements within the pyloric cycle can be regulated independently. The potential implications of these data for modulation of synaptic efficacy in other preparations are discussed.


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