Responses of young Xenopus laevis tadpoles to light dimming: possible roles for the pineal eye

2000 ◽  
Vol 203 (12) ◽  
pp. 1857-1867 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Jamieson ◽  
A. Roberts

When the light is dimmed, the pineal eye of hatchling Xenopus laevis tadpoles excites the central pattern generator for swimming, but the behavioural significance of pineal excitation is unclear. We show that tadpoles spend 99 % of their time hanging from the surface meniscus or solid objects using mucus secreted by a cement gland on the head. Attachment inhibits swimming, but unattached tadpoles swim spontaneously. Provided that their pineal eye is intact, they attach closer to the water surface in the dark than in the light and attach preferentially to the underside of floating objects that cast shadows. Dimming causes tadpoles swimming horizontally to turn upwards and is very effective in initiating upward swimming in unattached tadpoles. Similar pineal-dependent responses during swimming are present up to stage 44. Pinealectomy blocks responses to dimming at all stages. Recordings from immobilised tadpoles reveal that light dimming induces faster fictive swimming and that pineal activity is increased for up to 20 min during sustained light dimming. We suggest that the increase in pineal discharge during dimming increases the probability of upward swimming and, in this way, increases the probability of tadpoles attaching to objects higher in the water column that cast shadows.

1982 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 197-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Kahn ◽  
A. Roberts

Xenopus embryos struggle when restrained. Struggling involves rhythmic movements of large amplitude, in which waves of bending propagate from the tail to the head. Underlying this, electrical activity in myotomal muscles occurs in rhythmic bursts that alternate on either side of a segment. Bursts in ipsilateral segments occur in a caudo-rostral sequence. Curarized embryos can generate motor nerve activity in a struggling pattern in the absence of rhythmic sensory stimulation; the pattern is therefore produced by a central pattern generator.


1992 ◽  
Vol 169 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. Boothby ◽  
A. Roberts

1. Xenopus laevis embryos stop swimming in response to pressure on the cement gland. This behaviour and ‘fictive’ stopping are blocked by bicuculline (10 mumol 1(−1)), tubocurarine (110 mumol 1(−1)) and kynurenic acid (0.5 mmol 1(−1)). 2. Intracellular recordings from spinal neurones active during swimming have shown that pressure on the cement gland evokes compound, chloride-dependent inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs). These are blocked by bicuculline, tubocurarine and kynurenic acid, but are unaffected by strychnine (2 mumol 1(−1)). 3. When the cement gland is pressed, trigeminal ganglion activity precedes both the IPSPs and the termination of ‘fictive’ swimming activity recorded in rhythmic spinal neurones. The trigeminal discharge is unaffected by the antagonists bicuculline, tubocurarine, kynurenic acid and strychnine. 4. Intracellular recordings from the hindbrain have revealed neurones that are normally silent, but rhythmically inhibited during ‘fictive’ swimming. In these neurones pressure on the cement gland evokes depolarising potentials, often with one or more spikes. 5. We propose that the stopping response depends on the excitation of pressure-sensitive trigeminal receptors which innervate the cement gland. These release an excitatory amino acid to excite brainstem GABAergic reticulospinal neurones, which inhibit spinal neurones to turn off the central pattern generator for swimming. There may also be a less direct pathway.


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