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1.
Summary Morphologically identified spiking ocellar interneurons (LB and LD-neurons) of the honeybee (Apis melliferd) were investigated by combined intracellular recording and staining techniques using multimodal stimulus programs.Response patterns containing both graded and action potentials (mixed response), and pure spiking responses were analysed. Mixed responses allow a comparison of information coded simultaneously by graded and action potentials in one neuron. In most cases the intensity dependence coded by spikes was found to be similar to the intensity dependence coded by one of two different parameters evaluated from the graded signal. Lneurons with mixed responses were unimodal, i.e. they reacted exclusively to stationary illumination of the ocelli, as do nonspiking L-neurons.In contrast, spiking L-neurons that lacked a graded response component could also respond to stimuli of other sensory modalities: moving patterns, compound eye illumination, airstreams, mechanical and gustatory stimulation. One LD-neuron was also excited by the wing beat.Recordings from the same type of neuron in different individuals demonstrate that the input modalities and response patterns of L-neurons vary remarkably. Consequently many recordings are required to properly characterise the physiological properties of these neurons even though anatomically they are identified.The existence of graded and action potentials in the same cell and the fact that these two signals carry different information is discussed in the context of a possible role for information transmission from L-neurons to postsynaptic cells.Abbreviation R/I response/intensity  相似文献   

2.
Transfer characteristics of the synapse made from second- to third-order neurons of cockroach ocelli were studied using simultaneous microelectrode penetrations and the application of tetrodotoxin. Potential changes were evoked in second-order neurons by either an extrinsic current or a sinusoidally modulated light. The synapse had a low-pass filter characteristic with a cutoff frequency of 25-30 Hz, which passed most presynaptic signals. The synapse operated at an exponentially rising part of the overall sigmoidal input/output curve relating pre- and postsynaptic voltages. Although the response of the second-order neuron to sinusoidal light was essentially linear, the response of the third-order neuron contained an accelerating nonlinearity: the response amplitude was a positively accelerated function of the stimulus contrast, reflecting nonlinear synaptic transmission. The response of the third-order neuron exhibited a half-wave rectification: the depolarizing response to light decrement was much larger than the hyperpolarizing response to light increment. Nonlinear synaptic transmission also enhanced the transient response to step-like intensity changes. I conclude that (a) the major function of synaptic transmission between second- and third-order neurons of cockroach ocelli is to convert linear presynaptic signals into nonlinear ones and that (b) signal transmission at the synapse between second- and third-order neurons of cockroach ocelli fundamentally differs from that at the synapse between photoreceptors and second-order neurons of visual systems so far studied, where the synapse operates in the midregion of the characteristic curve and the transmission is essentially linear.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Changing the temperature from 10–40 °C modifies the transmission at an established monosynaptic connection between the fast extensor tibiae (FETi) and flexor tibiae motor neurons in the metathoracic ganglion of the locustSchistocerca gregaria (Forskål). Striking changes occur to the shape of the spikes, to membrane resistance, to the synaptic delay, and to the evoked synaptic potentials.In the presynaptic FETi motor neuron, raising the temperature reduces the amplitude of an antidromic spike recorded in the soma by a factor of 10 (40 mV to 4 mV), reduces the time taken to reach peak amplitude by 5 (3.5 to 0.7 ms) and decreases the duration at half maximum amplitude by 0.5. The conduction velocity of the spike in the axon is increased by 50% from 10 °C to 40 °C. Orthodromic spikes are affected by temperature in a similar way to the antidromic spikes.The membrane resistance of both pre- and postsynaptic motor neurons falls as the temperature is raised. The membrane resistance of FETi falls by a factor of 4 (about 4 M at 10 °C to 1 M at 40 °C). A contributory component to this fall could be the increase in the frequency of synaptic potentials generated as a result of inputs from other neurons. No temperature dependence could be demonstrated on the voltage threshold relative to resting potential for evoking orthodromic spikes, but because the resistance changes, the current needed to achieve this voltage must be increased at higher temperatures.The latency measured from the peak of the spike in the soma of FETi to the start of the EPSP in the soma of a flexor motor neuron decreases by a factor of 20 (10 ms at 10 °C to 0.5 ms at 40 °C).In a postsynaptic flexor tibiae motor neuron, the amplitude of the evoked synaptic potential increases by a factor of 3.4 (5 mV to 17 mV), its duration at half maximum amplitude decreases by 3 (7 ms at 12 °C to 2.3 ms at 32 °C) and its rate of rise increases by 3. An increased likelihood that spikes will occur in the flexor contributes to the enhanced amplitude of the compound EPSP at temperatures above 20 °C.Abbreviation FETi fast extensor tibiae motor neuron  相似文献   

4.
Simmons PJ 《Neuron》2002,35(4):749-758
Second-order neurons L1-3 of the locust ocellar pathway make inhibitory synapses with each other. Although the synapses transmit graded potentials, transmission depresses rapidly and completely so that a synapse only transmits when the presynaptic terminal depolarizes rapidly. The rate at which a presynaptic neuron depolarizes determines the rate at which a postsynaptic neuron hyperpolarizes, and neurotransmitter is only released during a fixed 2 ms long period. Consequently, the amplitude of a postsynaptic potential depends on the rate rather than the amplitude of a presynaptic depolarization. Following a postsynaptic potential, a synapse recovers from depression over about a second. The synapse recovers from depression even if the presynaptic terminal is held depolarized.  相似文献   

5.
The relationship between the slow potential and spikes of second-order ocellar neurons of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana, was studied. The stimulus was a sinusoidally modulated light with various mean illuminances. A solitary spike was generated at the depolarizing phase of the modulation response. Analysis of the relationship between the amplitude/frequency of voltage modulation and the rate of spike generation showed that (a) the spike initiation process was bandpass at approximately 0.5-5 Hz, (b) the process contained a dynamic linearity and a static nonlinearity, and (c) the spike threshold at optimal frequencies (0.5-5 Hz) remained unchanged over a mean illuminance range of 3.6 log units, whereas (d) the spike threshold at frequencies of less than 0.5 Hz was lower at a dimmer mean illuminance. The voltage noise in the response was larger and the mean membrane potential level was more positive at a dimmer mean illuminance. Steady or noise current injection during sinusoidal light stimulation showed that (a) the decrease in the spike threshold at a dimmer mean illuminance was due to the increase in the noise variance: the noise had facilitatory effects on the spike initiation; and (b) the change in the mean potential level had little effect on the spike threshold. We conclude that fundamental signal modifications occur during the spike initiation in the cockroach ocellar neuron, a finding that differs from the spike initiation process in other visual systems, including Limulus eye and vertebrate retina, in which it is presumed that little signal modification occurs at the analog-to-digital conversion process.  相似文献   

6.
Responses of the antennal thermosensitive neuron of the ground beetle Platynus assimilis to warming from 20 to 50 °C were measured and analysed. During warming, neurons switched from regular spiking to bursting. ISI analysis showed that the number of spikes in the burst and spike frequency within the burst were temperature dependent and may precisely encode unfavourably or dangerously high temperatures in a graded manner. In contrast, regular spikes of the neuron encode moderate temperatures at 20-30 °C. The threshold temperature of spike bursting varied in different neurons from 25 to 47 °C. As a result, the number of bursting neurons increased with temperature increase. Therefore, in addition to the burst characteristics, the total number of bursting neurons may also contain useful information on external temperature. A relationship between the spike bursts and locomotor activity of the beetles was found which may have importance in behavioural thermoregulation of the species. At 44.4 ± 0.6 °C, first indications of partial paralysis (of the hind legs) were observed. We emphasize, that in contrast to various sensory systems studied, the thermoreceptor neuron of P. assimilis has a stable and continuous burst train, no temporal information is encoded in the timing of the bursts.  相似文献   

7.
The DNI, DNM and DNC descending interneurons all have very similar properties and are each at the convergence of visual, ocellar, wind-hair and other mechanoreceptor inputs. The 3 neurons respond almost exclusively to movement of the animal in space about its three axes of rotation. All are spatially and directionally selective. Movements in the preferred sense produce increasingly strong responses with amplitude and absolute position, while movements in the antipreferred sense usually elicit no response at all. Movements in the preferred sense, but towards, rather than away from, the normal flying position start to produce responses only as the animal approaches the normal flight position. The neurons function as feature detectors, responding only to specific sorts of deviation from course. DNI, DNM and DNC differ from one another principally in their directionality. DNI responds optimally to a diving banked turn to the ipsilateral side, DNM to downwards pitch, and the DNC to a diving banked turn to the contralateral side. The DN neurons contribute to the production of steering manoeuvres. They appear to be representatives of a larger class of descending interneurons bringing exteroceptive sensory input to the thoracic locomotory neuropil. The occurrence of this class of units in locusts and other insects is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Sinusoidally modulated and discrete light pulses, the parameters of which approximated natural light conditions, were used to determine the response characteristics of ocellar first-order interneurons of the worker honeybee (Apis mellifera carnica). Large ocellar interneurons which terminate within the brain (LB neurons) were recorded from intracellularly and were identified visually after dye injection. Absolute sensitivity of LB neurons to light flashes ranges from 4 X 10(9) quanta/cm2s (Q) for MOC1,7 neurons to 1 X 10(12) Q for MOC3,4. The slope of the response-intensity (R/I) functions, which were calculated for intensities between 2 X 10(9) and 4 X 10(13) Q, varies in different types of LB neurons. The strongest response is given by one group of median ocellar neurons. With constant light around 10(13) Q, most LB neurons exhibit oscillatory hyperpolarizations which, upon increasing the stimulus to even higher intensities (10(14)-10(15) Q), gradually evolve to a hyperpolarized plateau. The frequency of these oscillatory voltage fluctuations increases with the rate of modulation of the stimulating light and reaches maximum values at 5-15 Hz modulation frequency. Two groups of MOC neurons follow sinusoidally modulated light up to 32 +/- 8 Hz (n = 5) and 29 +/- 6 Hz (n = 3), respectively, whereas lateral ocellar neurons cut off at 17 +/- 5 Hz (n = 4). The possible role of LB neurons is discussed. They may be inactivated when the bee is flying in bright sunlight.  相似文献   

9.
The electroretinogram (ERG) of the adult cabbage looper (Trichoplusia ni) ocellus has been studied by extracellular recording methods. Using white light stimulation, the ERG was found to have four components, two of which differ from those of ocelli previously studied. Here component 3 is an excitatory post-synaptic potential (EPSP) and component 4 is an excitatory spike discharge from the ocellar second-order neurons. The excitatory nature of these components has been verified by two experiments. In a light adaptation experiment decreased stimulus intervals caused a reduction in the number of excitatory spikes. In an experiment with the anticholinesterase tetraethylpyrophosphate (TEPP), treatment of the preparation abolished the excitatory spike discharge and reduced the magnitude of the EPSP.  相似文献   

10.
Kawai F  Horiguchi M  Suzuki H  Miyachi E 《Neuron》2001,30(2):451-458
Mammalian photoreceptors are hyperpolarized by a light stimulus and are commonly thought to be nonspiking neurons. We used the whole-cell patch-clamp technique on surgically excised human retina to examine whether human photoreceptors can elicit action potentials. We discovered that human rod photoreceptors express voltage-gated Na(+) channels, and generate Na(+) action potentials, in response to membrane depolarization from membrane potentials of -60 or -70 mV. Na(+) spikes in human rods were elicited at the termination of a light response that hyperpolarized the potential well below -50 mV. This served to amplify the release of a neurotransmitter when a bright light is turned off, and thus selectively amplify the off response to the light signal.  相似文献   

11.
Synaptic transmission from second- to third-order neurons of cockroach ocelli occurs in an exponentially rising part of the overall sigmoidal characteristic curve relating pre- and postsynaptic voltage. Because of the nonlinear nature of the synapse, linear responses of second-order neurons to changes in ligh intensity are half-wave rectified, i.e., the response to a decrement in light is amplified whereas that to an increment in light is compressed. Here I report that the gain of synaptic transmission from second- to third-order neurons changes by ambient light levels and by wind stimulation applied to the cerci. Transfer characteristics of the synapse were studied by simultaneous intracellular recordings of second- and third-order neurons. Potential changes were evoked in second-order neurons by a sinusoidally modulated light with various mean luminances. With a decrease in the mean luminance (a) the mean membrane potential of second-order neurons was depolarized, (b) the synapse between the second- and third-order neurons operated in a steeper range of the exponential characteristic curve, where the gain to transmit modulatory signals was higher, and (c) the gain of third-order neurons to detect a decrement in light increased. Second-order neurons were depolarized when a wind or tactile stimulus was applied to various parts of the body including the cerci. During a wind-evoked depolarization, the synapse operated in a steeper range of the characteristic curve, which resulted in an increased gain of third-order neurons to detect light decrements. I conclude that the nonlinear nature of the synapse between the second- and third-order neurons provides an opportunity for an adjustment of gain to transmit signals of intensity change. The possibility that a similar gain control occurs in other visual systems and underlies a more advanced visual function, i.e., detection of motion, is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Nine isoforms of voltage-gated sodium channels (NaV) have been characterized and in excitable tissues they are responsible for the initiation and conduction of action potentials. For primary afferent neurons residing in dorsal root ganglia (DRG), individual neurons may express multiple NaV isoforms extending the neuron’s functional capabilities. Since expression of NaV isoforms can be differentially regulated by neurotrophic factors we have examined the functional consequences of exposure to either nerve growth factor (NGF) or glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) on action potential conduction in outgrowing cultured porcine neurites of DRG neurons. Calcium signals were recorded using the exogenous intensity based calcium indicator Fluo-8®, AM. In 94 neurons, calcium signals were conducted along neurites in response to electrical stimulation of the soma. At an image acquisition rate of 25 Hz it was possible to discern calcium transients in response to individual electrical stimuli. The peak amplitude of electrically-evoked calcium signals was limited by the ability of the neuron to follow the stimulus frequency. The stimulus frequency required to evoke a half-maximal calcium response was approximately 3 Hz at room temperature. In 13 of 14 (93%) NGF-responsive neurites, TTX-r NaV isoforms alone were sufficient to support propagated signals. In contrast, calcium signals mediated by TTX-r NaVs were evident in only 4 of 11 (36%) neurites from somata cultured in GDNF. This establishes a basis for assessing action potential signaling using calcium imaging techniques in individual cultured neurites and suggests that, in the pig, afferent nociceptor classes relying on the functional properties of TTX-r NaV isoforms, such as cold-nociceptors, most probably derive from NGF-responsive DRG neurons.  相似文献   

13.
Three descending brain interneurons (DNI, DNM, DNC) are described from Locusta migratoria. All are paired, dorsally situated neurons, with soma in the protocerebrum, input dendrites in the proto- and deuterocerebrum, and a single axon running to the metathoracic ganglion and sometimes further. In DNI the soma and all cerebral arborizations lie ipsilateral to the axon. Discrete regions of arborization lie in the ipsilateral and medial ocellar tracts, the midprotocerebrum and the deuterocerebrum. In the other ganglia the axon branches only ipsilaterally, principally laterally in the flight motor neuropil but also towards the midline. DNC is similarly organized to DNI, but the cell crosses the midline in the brain. Soma, the single projection into a lateral ocellar tract, and the midprotocerebral arborization all lie contralateral to the axon. The deuterocerebral arborization is, however, ipsilateral to the axon. The pattern of projections in the remaining ganglia resembles that of DNI. The soma and all cerebral arborizations of DNM lie ipsilateral to the axon. The arborization is only weakly subdivided into protocerebral, deuterocerebral and medial ocellar tract regions. In the remaining ganglia the arborization extends bilaterally to similar areas of both left and right flight motor neuropil. A table of synonymy is given, equating the various names used for these neurons by previous authors. The morphology correlates well with the known input and output connections. They respond physiologically to deviations from the normal flight posture mediated by ocelli, eyes and wind hairs and connect to the thoracic flight apparatus.  相似文献   

14.
Cobalt chloride has on the ocellus of the cockroach Periplaneta americana, the same destroying effect as a thermocauterisation or electrocoagulation. When an iontophoretic diffusion of cobalt chloride is done without any current from the ocelli, the second-order ocellar neurons are destroyed yet no modification is observed in the vital functions of the cockroach. Cobalt chloride iontophoresis could be used to destroy ocellar neurons only if these ocellar neurons are not going to be immediately replaced. Experiments show that the ocellar neuron killed is replaced after apolysis, but if the substitute neuron is destroyed in its turn, the destruction is definitive. These results suggest two methods of destruction for second-order ocellar neurons: one for larvae and one for adult cockroaches.  相似文献   

15.
Inhibitory control over activity of the receptor neuron was investigated in a preparation of the stretch receptor and abdominal ganglionic chain in crayfishes. Potentials were recorded intracellularly from receptor neurons and neurons of the abdominal ganglion, and extracellularly from the dorsal roots. IPSPs appeared in the receptor neuron in response to stimulation of that same neuron or of the abdominal ganglionic chain. The relationship between spikes at the input and output of the inhibitory neuron varied over a wide range depending on the functional state of the neuron. A linear relationship was established between the time before appearance of the IPSP and the duration of the interspike interval of the slowly adapting neuron (SAN) and also between the firing rate of this and the inhibitory neurons during recurrent inhibition. Factors influencing the length of the interspike interval of the SAN on the appearance of an IPSP in it were investigated. It is postulated that summation of potentials evoked by spikes of the SAN and also of potentials evoked by spikes of that neuron, together with local processes evidently of endogenous nature takes place in the inhibitory neuron. IPSPs were recorded from two neurons resistant to strychnine and blocked by picrotoxin on the receptor neuron. The structural and functional organization of the individual elements in the chain of recurrent inhibition and inhibition evoked by stimulation of the abdominal ganglionic chain is discussed.Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 5, No. 3, pp. 323–332, May–June, 1973.  相似文献   

16.
It is well known that some neurons tend to fire packets of action potentials followed by periods of quiescence (bursts) while others within the same stage of sensory processing fire in a tonic manner. However, the respective computational advantages of bursting and tonic neurons for encoding time varying signals largely remain a mystery. Weakly electric fish use cutaneous electroreceptors to convey information about sensory stimuli and it has been shown that some electroreceptors exhibit bursting dynamics while others do not. In this study, we compare the neural coding capabilities of tonically firing and bursting electroreceptor model neurons using information theoretic measures. We find that both bursting and tonically firing model neurons efficiently transmit information about the stimulus. However, the decoding mechanisms that must be used for each differ greatly: a non-linear decoder would be required to extract all the available information transmitted by the bursting model neuron whereas a linear one might suffice for the tonically firing model neuron. Further investigations using stimulus reconstruction techniques reveal that, unlike the tonically firing model neuron, the bursting model neuron does not encode the detailed time course of the stimulus. A novel measure of feature detection reveals that the bursting neuron signals certain stimulus features. Finally, we show that feature extraction and stimulus estimation are mutually exclusive computations occurring in bursting and tonically firing model neurons, respectively. Our results therefore suggest that stimulus estimation and feature extraction might be parallel computations in certain sensory systems rather than being sequential as has been previously proposed.  相似文献   

17.
Information is encoded in neural circuits using both graded and action potentials, converting between them within single neurons and successive processing layers. This conversion is accompanied by information loss and a drop in energy efficiency. We investigate the biophysical causes of this loss of information and efficiency by comparing spiking neuron models, containing stochastic voltage-gated Na+ and K+ channels, with generator potential and graded potential models lacking voltage-gated Na+ channels. We identify three causes of information loss in the generator potential that are the by-product of action potential generation: (1) the voltage-gated Na+ channels necessary for action potential generation increase intrinsic noise and (2) introduce non-linearities, and (3) the finite duration of the action potential creates a ‘footprint’ in the generator potential that obscures incoming signals. These three processes reduce information rates by ∼50% in generator potentials, to ∼3 times that of spike trains. Both generator potentials and graded potentials consume almost an order of magnitude less energy per second than spike trains. Because of the lower information rates of generator potentials they are substantially less energy efficient than graded potentials. However, both are an order of magnitude more efficient than spike trains due to the higher energy costs and low information content of spikes, emphasizing that there is a two-fold cost of converting analogue to digital; information loss and cost inflation.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of the soma of a spinal dorsal horn neuron, a spinal ventral horn neuron (presumably a motoneuron), and a hippocampal pyramidal neuron to generate action potentials was studied using patch-clamp recordings from rat spinal cord slices, the "entire soma isolation" method, and computer simulations. By comparing original recordings from an isolated soma of a dorsal horn neuron with simulated responses, it was shown that computer models can be adequate for the study of somatic excitability. The modeled somata of both spinal neurons were unable to generate action potentials, showing only passive and local responses to current injections. A four- to eightfold increase in the original density of Na(+) channels was necessary to make the modeled somata of both spinal neurons excitable. In contrast to spinal neurons, the modeled soma of the hippocampal pyramidal neuron generated spikes with an overshoot of +9 mV. It is concluded that the somata of spinal neurons cannot generate action potentials and seem to resist their propagation from the axon to dendrites. In contrast, the soma of the hippocampal pyramidal neuron is able to generate spikes. It cannot initiate action potentials in the intact neurons, but it can support their back-propagation from the axon initial segment to dendrites.  相似文献   

19.
Schnitzer MJ  Meister M 《Neuron》2003,37(3):499-511
Population codes in the brain have generally been characterized by recording responses from one neuron at a time. This approach will miss codes that rely on concerted patterns of action potentials from many cells. Here we analyze visual signaling in populations of ganglion cells recorded from the isolated salamander retina. These neurons tend to fire synchronously far more frequently than expected by chance. We present an efficient algorithm to identify what groups of cells cooperate in this way. Such groups can include up to seven or more neurons and may account for more than 50% of all the spikes recorded from the retina. These firing patterns represent specific messages about the visual stimulus that differ significantly from what one would derive by single-cell analysis.  相似文献   

20.
Cricket ultrasound avoidance is a classic model system for neuroethology. Avoidance steering is triggered by high-firing-rate bursts of spikes in the auditory command neuron AN2. Although bursting is common among sensory neurons, and although the detailed structure of bursts may encode information about the stimulus, it is as yet unclear whether this information is decoded. We address this question in two ways: from an information coding point of view, by showing the relationship between stimulus and burst structure; and also from a functional point of view by showing the relationship between burst structure and behavior. We conclude that the burst structure carries detailed temporal information about the stimulus but that this has little impact on the behavioral response, which is affected mainly by burst size.  相似文献   

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