Functional Characterization and Anatomical Identification of Motion Sensitive Neurons in the Lobula plate of the Blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala

1976 ◽  
Vol 31 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 629-634 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Hausen

8 classes of homo- and heterolateral wide field neurons of the Lobula plate of Calliphora erythrocephala were investigated electrophysiologically and identified by intracellular injection of procion yellow. All recorded neurons were motion-sensitive. Some of the homolateral neurons respond only with graded potentials to visual stimulation; all heterolateral elements generate spike potentials. Connections between identified neurons were investigated by means of simultaneous double recordings. The described neurons are compared with units known from earlier extracellular studies.

1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (3) ◽  
pp. 1786-1799 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Brotz ◽  
A. Borst

1. To identify some of the neurotransmitters involved in the processing of visual motion information the pharmacology of transmitter receptors on motion-sensitive visual interneurons (VS and HS cells) was investigated in an in vitro preparation of the blowfly (Calliphora erythrocephala) brain. Cholinergic and GABAergic drugs were applied in the bath and iontophoretically while recording intracellularly from HS and VS cells. 2. Bath-applied carbachol (10 and 100 microM) leads to a depolarization in HS and VS cells. One micromolar nicotine also has a depolarizing effect. Both agonists are effective in 0 Ca2+/high Mg(2+)-saline, too, which isolates the cells synaptically. The muscarinic agonists pilocarpine and oxotremorine have no effects on the membrane potential. 3. Iontophoretic application of acetylcholine, carbachol, and nicotine depolarizes VS and HS cells. The iontophoretic carbachol response is antagonized by alpha-bungarotoxin (EC50 = 0.19 microM), mecamylamine (EC50 = 0.32 microM), d-tubocurarine (EC50 = 9.5 microM), and bicuculline but not by decamethonium and scopolamine. 4. Bath application of muscimol strongly hyperpolarizes VS cells in normal fly saline. The gamma-aminobutyric acid-C (GABAC)-receptor agonist cis-4-aminocrotonic acid (CACA) has no effects. The hyperpolarizing response to iontophoretic applied muscimol is present in 0 Ca2+/high Mg2+ saline as well as in Co(2+)-containing saline. The muscimol response is reduced in low chloride saline and thus chloride sensitive. The muscimol response is blocked by picrotoxinin (EC50 = 3.4 microM) but not by the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline. 5. Taken together the primary responses of the lobula plate tangential cells appear to be nicotinic cholinergic and GABAergic. 6. The pharmacology of natural synaptic input to VS cells was investigated by extracellular electrical stimulation of the medulla. Such evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) are blocked reversibly in 0 Ca2+/high Mg2+ saline. The nicotinic antagonists mecamylamine (1 microM) and d-tubocurarine (50-100 microM) abolish or diminish the EPSPs, respectively. 7. The pharmacological data are incorporated into a semicellular model of a visual motion detector favoring a role of lobula plate tangential cells in certain steps of visual motion processing. Cholinergic and GABAergic inputs are an ideal cellular implementation of a linear subtraction of the signals arising from local motion-sensitive elements with opposite preferred direction. Such a mechanism enhances direction-selectivity and, together with dendritic integration, increases the sensitivity of the tangential cells for wide-field motion.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-a-1-a
Author(s):  
M. R. Ibbotson ◽  
R. F. Mark

Pages 1448–1450: M. R. Ibbotson and R. F. Mark, “Wide-field nondirectional visual units in the pretectum: do they suppress ocular following of saccade-induced visual stimulation.” Page 1450, right column, preceding references, the following dates should be inserted: Received 6 April 1994; accepted in final form 10 May 1994.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 1448-1450 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Ibbotson ◽  
R. F. Mark

1. Direction-selective neurons in the nucleus of the optic tract (NOT) provide motion signals for controlling ocular following responses. When stimulated at low temporal and high spatial frequencies of motion (slow speeds), these retinal-slip neurons produce directional responses. When stimulated by motion at high temporal and low spatial frequencies (the visual conditions during saccades) the spontaneous activities of the neurons are inhibited by motion in all directions. A second class of neurons in, or near, the NOT have large receptive fields, are nondirectional, and are tuned to detect the same spatial and temporal stimuli that induce nondirectional inhibition in the retinal-slip neurons. We suggest that the nondirectional cells provide an inhibitory input for the retinal-slip neurons and therefore prevent ocular following of the visual displacements that accompany saccades.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
M. R. Ibbotson ◽  
R. F. Mark

Pages 1448–1450: M. R. Ibbotson and R. F. Mark, “Wide-field nondirectional visual units in the pretectum: do they suppress ocular following of saccade-induced visual stimulation.” Page 1450, right column, preceding references, the following dates should be inserted: Received 6 April 1994; accepted in final form 10 May 1994.


1979 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-135
Author(s):  
P. R. BENJAMIN ◽  
R. M. ROSE ◽  
CAROLE T. SLADE ◽  
M. G. LACY

The morphology of seven types of identified neurones in buccal ganglia of Lymnaea was investigated by intracellular injection of Procion Yellow and retrograde injection of cobaltous chloride into the nerve roots of the buccal ganglia. The results provided anatomical support for the electrophysiological findings that some cells are motoneurones for muscles of the buccal mass (type 4-group cells, types 6 and 8 cells). Others project to nerves innervating oesophageal tissue (types 2, 3 and 5 cells) and to pro-oesophageal tissue (types 3 and 5 cells). The type-1 cells project to the salivary gland ducts and are similar to the salivary gland motoneurones found in other molluscan species.


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