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1.
Summary The rhythmic constriction of the heart tubes in the leech Hirudo medicinalis is controlled by an identified set of motor neurons (HE cells) and interneurons (HN cells) (reviewed by Calabrese and Peterson 1983). Electrophysiological recordings have indicated particular synaptic relationships among HE and HN cells. In the present study, the synaptic framework mediating the interactions among HE cells and HN cells was examined anatomically. Using light and electron microscopy of physiologically identified, HRP-injected cells, we have examined the zones of interaction and types of contacts between specific cells. HE cells, which have very fine, threadlike processes, interact with their contralateral homologues throughout most of the middle third of the ganglionic neuropil. When HE-cell neuntes come together, the apposed plasma membranes are rigidly parallel, separated by an intercellular gap of 6 nm, for up to 6 m. These specializations must form the structural basis for the strong electrical coupling observed (Peterson 1983) between HE-cell pairs. HE cells also emit from the main neurite a series of extremely fine processes that extend dorsally. These appear in the light microscope to contact processes of the ipsilateral HN cell of the same ganglion, and are also in a position to make contact with the axons of more anterior HN cells. The intraganglionic processes of HN cells, which are studded with large varicosities, ramify in part of the region of neuropil occupied by HE-cell processes, as well as more posteriorly. Contacts between HE and HN cells, which are known to be mostly inhibitory synaptic contacts, are seen in the electron microscope to be formed between medium-diameter HN processes, which are filled with clear round synaptic vesicles, and multiple fine tendrils of the HE cell that surround the HN process. Certain HN cells form reciprocal inhibitory synapses with their contralateral homologues. These contacts occur near the midline, sometimes in the major mass of neuropil and sometimes embedded in the extracellular material that ensheathes the neuropil. The contacts are between medium-and small-diameter profiles that are both filled with synaptic vesicles. Our findings indicate that various classes of physiological interactions among HE and HN cells are mediated by anatomically distinct types of contacts and, at least in some cases, are segregated from each other on the neuritic trees of the cells.  相似文献   

2.
Following photoreceptor degeneration, ON and OFF retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in the rd-1/rd-1 mouse receive rhythmic synaptic input that elicits bursts of action potentials at ∼10 Hz. To characterize the properties of this activity, RGCs were targeted for paired recording and morphological classification as either ON alpha, OFF alpha or non-alpha RGCs using two-photon imaging. Identified cell types exhibited rhythmic spike activity. Cross-correlation of spike trains recorded simultaneously from pairs of RGCs revealed that activity was correlated more strongly between alpha RGCs than between alpha and non-alpha cell pairs. Bursts of action potentials in alpha RGC pairs of the same type, i.e. two ON or two OFF cells, were in phase, while bursts in dissimilar alpha cell types, i.e. an ON and an OFF RGC, were 180 degrees out of phase. This result is consistent with RGC activity being driven by an input that provides correlated excitation to ON cells and inhibition to OFF cells. A2 amacrine cells were investigated as a candidate cellular mechanism and found to display 10 Hz oscillations in membrane voltage and current that persisted in the presence of antagonists of fast synaptic transmission and were eliminated by tetrodotoxin. Results support the conclusion that the rhythmic RGC activity originates in a presynaptic network of electrically coupled cells including A2s via a Na+-channel dependent mechanism. Network activity drives out of phase oscillations in ON and OFF cone bipolar cells, entraining similar frequency fluctuations in RGC spike activity over an area of retina that migrates with changes in the spatial locus of the cellular oscillator.  相似文献   

3.
The bilateral paired heart tubes of the leech Hirudo medicinalisare controlled, via excitatory synapses, by a set of bilaterallypaired segmental heart motor neurons (HE cells) which are inturn controlled, via inhibitory synapses, by a set of bilaterallypaired segmental heart interneurons (HN cells). The HE cellsproduce rhythmic impulse bursts because their inherent steadydischarge is periodically inhibited by the HN cells, most ofwhich produce impulse bursts endogenously. The known synapticinteractions among the HN cells and HE cells can account wellfor the observed behavior of the hearts. The HE cells are coordinatedby the HN cells such that the segmental heart tube sectionson one side constrict in a caudorostral sequence (peristalsis),while the segmental heart tube sections on the other side constrictnearly synchronously (non-peristalsis). This difference in thecoordination modes of the two hearts is not permanent; reciprocalcoordination mode transitions occur every 10–50 heartbeatcycles. Only one member of HN(5) cell pair (the HN cells ofthe fifth segmental ganglion) is rhythmically active at a time,the other being completely inactive. By coordinating the frontand rear HN cells the active HN(5) cell produces non-peristalsisipsilaterally and peristalsis contralaterally. Reciprocal changesin the activity-inactivity pattern of the HN(5) cell pair areresponsible for the reciprocal changes in the coordination mode.  相似文献   

4.
Experiments with intracellular recording from neurons of the isolated crayfish somatogastric ganglion established that the membrane potential of the neurons is 53±3 mV. Single stimulation of the central branches of the ganglion evoked EPSP and a spike in the neurons. The spike amplitude was 7.5±0.6 mV. The small amplitude of the spike is explained by the fact that it arises at some distance from the body of the neuron and propagates electrotonically in it. Summation of several EPSP is necessary in most cases for initiation of the spike. When the orthodromic stimulus was strong enough, and IPSP occurred in some cells in addition to the EPSP and spike. Stimulation of the peripheral nerves of the ganglion induced in most neurons antidromic excitation and in some neurons orthodromic excitation. Some neurons spontaneously discharged rhythmically with an unstable frequency (11–27 impulses/sec). An investigation of the effect on neurons of chemical agents [acetylcholine, adrenalin, noradrenalin, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamic acid, and dopamine] showed that acetylcholine has the strongest and most stable depolarizing action and apparently is a synaptic transmitter in the ganglion. The other agents excited some neurons — depolarized them and evoked rhythmic discharges — and, coversely, hyperpolarized and suppressed the rhythmic activity of other neurons. A scheme of neuronal organization of the somatogastric ganglion of the crayfish is proposed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 307–313, May–June, 1970.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of evoked rhythmic responses on the surface and in the depths of the retina of the carp (Cyprinus carpio) and tench (Tinca tinca) and the dependence of the amplitude — frequency characteristics of the response on stimulus intensity and duration were investigated by recording the local electroretinogram and unit activity of the ganglion cells. Rhythmic on- and off-responses to light differed in various characteristics, including their distribution between the cellular and synaptic layers of the retina. The frequency, amplitude, and number of waves in the response were found to depend on the parameters of the stimulus. On-, off-, and on — off-ganglion cells were represented in the records. Their spike discharge usually corresponded to a phase angle of the negative half-wave of the rhythmic response of close to /2. The results of experiments in which conduction along the optic nerve was blocked by cold showed that the system of generation of the rhythmic response in the retina is under the tonic influence of the centers.M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 61–68, January–February, 1977.  相似文献   

6.
Intracellular recordings were carried out on locust flight motoneurons after hemisection of individual thoracic ganglia. With the exception of minimal surgical manipulations, the animals were intact and able to perform tethered flight. Analysis of the synaptic drive recorded in the motoneurons during flight motor activity revealed the extent to which ganglion hemisection influenced the premotor rhythm generating network.
1.  Hemisection of the mesothoracic ganglion (Fig. 2) as well as hemisection of both the mesothoracic and the prothoracic ganglia (Fig. 3) had no significant effects on the pattern of synaptic input to the flight motoneurons. Thus the rhythm generating premotor network does not depend on commissural information transfer in the mesothoracic and the prothoracic ganglia. This conclusion was supported by experiments in which more extensive surgical isolations of thoracic ganglia were carried out (Fig. 5).
2.  Removal of input from wing receptors (deafferentation) in addition to hemisection of the mesothoracic ganglion (Fig. 4) resulted in rhythmic and coordinated oscillations of the motoneuron membrane potential which were indistinguishable from those observed in deafferented animals with all ganglia intact.
3.  Hemisection of the metathoracic ganglion had more pronounced effects on the patterns of synaptic drive to the flight motoneurons and their spike discharge. Rhythmic activity which was often subthreshold could, however, still be recorded following a metathoracic split (Fig. 6).
4.  No rhythmic synaptic input was observed after hemisection of both mesothoracic and metathoracic ganglia (Fig. 7).
  相似文献   

7.
External recording and stimulation, techniques were used to determine which neurons and interactions are essential for production of the periodic burst discharge in the lobster cardiac ganglion. Burst activity can be modulated by brief single shocks applied to the four small cells, but not by similar stimulation of the five large cells, suggesting that normally one or more small cells primarily determine burst rate and duration. Repetitive electrical stimulation of large cells initiates spike activity in small cells, probably via excitatory synaptic and/or electrotonic connections which may normally act to prolong bursts and decrease burst rate. Transection of the ganglion can result in burst activity in small cells in the partial or complete absence of large cell spike activity, but large cells isolated from small cell excitatory synaptic input by transection or by application of dinitrophenol do not burst. Generally, transections which decrease excitatory feedback to small cells are accompanied by an increase in burst rate, but mean spike frequency over an entire burst cycle stabilizes at the original level within 10–30 min for various groups of cells whose spike-initiating sites are still intact. These and previous results suggest that the system is two layered: one or more small cells generate the burst pattern and impose it on the large cells which are the system's motorneurons.  相似文献   

8.
The pyloric constrictor muscles of the stomach in Squilla can generate spikes by synaptic activation via the motor nerve from the stomatogastric ganglion. Spikes are followed by slow depolarizing afterpotentials (DAPs) which lead to sustained depolarization during a burst of spikes. 1. The frequency of rhythmic bursts induced by continuous depolarization is membrane voltage-dependent. A brief depolarizing or hyperpolarizing pulse can trigger or terminate bursts, respectively, in a threshold-dependent manner. 2. The conductance increases during the DAP response. The amplitude of DAP decreases by imposed depolarization, whereas it increases by hyperpolarization. DAPs from successive spikes sum to produce a sustained depolarizing potential capable of firing a burst. 3. The spike and DAP are reduced in amplitude by decreasing [Ca]o, enhanced by Sr2+ or Ba2+ substituted for Ca2+, and blocked by Co2+ or Mn2+. DAPs are selectively blocked by Ni2+, and the spike is followed by a hyperpolarizing afterpotential. 4. The spike and DAP are prolonged by intracellular injection of the Ca2+ chelator EGTA. A hyperpolarizing afterpotential is abolished by EGTA and enhanced by increasing [Ca]o. The DAP is diminished in Na(+)-free saline and reduced by tetrodotoxin. 5. It is concluded that the muscle fiber is endowed with endogenous oscillatory properties and that the oscillatory membrane events result from changes of a voltage- and time-dependent conductance to Ca2+ and Na+ and a Ca2+ activated conductance to K+.  相似文献   

9.
The abdominal ganglion of the mollusk Aplysia californica receives most of its blood supply through a small caudal artery that branches off the anterior aorta near its junction with the heart. Injection of an ink/gelatin mixture into the caudal artery revealed a consistent pattern of arterial branching within the ganglion and a general proximity of larger vessels to identified neurons controlling circulation in this animal. This morphological arrangement was particularly evident for the heart excitor interneuron, cell L10, which lies next to the caudal artery near its entry into the ganglion. In electrophysiological experiments, L10 was excited when blood flow or oxygen tension within the ganglion was reduced. This effect was expressed as a gradual increase in impulse frequency of L10 and conversion from tonic to bursting mode of spike discharge. L10 follower cells in the RB and LD neuron clusters were affected synaptically by the changes in L10 activity, while other follower cells (L3 and RD neurons) responded independently of L10's synaptic influence. The neurosecretory white cells (R3 to R14) that innervate the major arteries and pericardial tissues were also excited when ganglionic circulation was interrupted. In innervated preparations of the heart and respiratory organs, decreased circulation through the abdominal ganglion stimulated a transient increase in the rate and amplitude of respiratory (gill) pumping and pericardial contractions and caused a sustained increase in activity of the heart. Both responses increase cardiac output and both appear to involve a direct influence of ganglionic circulation on interneurons controlling the gill and heart. These results indicate that the cell-specific patterns of excitation and inhibition caused by fluctuations in ganglionic circulation may be important factors for maintaining circulatory homeostasis in this animal.  相似文献   

10.
A study of activity recorded with intracellular micropipettes was undertaken in the caudal abdominal ganglion of the crayfish in order to gain information about central fiber to fiber synaptic mechanisms. This synaptic system has well developed integrative properties. Excitatory post-synaptic potentials can be graded, and synaptic potentials from different inputs can sum to initiate spike discharge. In most impaled units, the spike discharge fails to destroy the synaptic potential, thereby allowing sustained depolarization and multiple spike discharge following single pulse stimulation to an afferent input. Some units had characteristics which suggest a graded threshold for spike generation along the post-synaptic fiber membrane. Other impaled units responded to afferent stimulation with spike discharges of two distinct amplitudes. The smaller or "abortive" spikes in such units may represent non-invading activity in branches of the post-synaptic axon. On a few occasions one afferent input was shown to inhibit the spike discharge initiated by another presynaptic input.  相似文献   

11.
Intracellular recordings were made from single or pairs of somata of the dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neurons of the metathoracic ganglion of the locust Schistocerca gregaria and the grasshopper Romalea microptera, during reflex actions, direct electric excitation and orthodromic and antidromic neural stimulation. Some, possibly all, of these neurons are unique, identifiable individuals in regard to their targets, which are specific peripheral muscles. Their physiological properties and the ways they are activated synaptically are, however, similar. Large, overshooting action potentials, comprising three components, occur. The first component in time is small and represents an excitatory synaptic potential for orthodromic stimulation or an axon spike (AS) for antidromic stimulation, electrotonically conducted into the soma. The second component is larger, being an electrotonically conducted integrating segment spike (ISS). The final component is the soma spike (SS). Neither AS nor ISS have a late positive phase, but there is a large, prolonged one for SS. The latter, combined with rapid accommodation, determine a low maximum firing rate for the neurons. Most nerves entering the ganglion make excitatory inputs onto each DUM neuron, which is readily driven to spike by electric excitation of either connective. There is a great deal of spontaneous excitatory synaptic input to each DUM neuron and a high proportion of it is common. Although there is no detectable electrical coupling between the cells, there is about 30% synchronous firing, apparently due to the common inputs; independent excitation and inhibition also occur. All sensory modalities tested have inputs to the neurons, which tend to fire constantly at a low rate (1 per 3–4 sec). In reflex actions, DUM neurons tend to fire before motor output occurs. It is suggested that the cells will be found to have many functions serving a general role comparable to that achieved by the release of adrenaline in vertebrates.  相似文献   

12.
The electrical properties of neurons in the supraoptic nucleus (so.n.) have been studied in the hypothalamic slice preparation by intracellular and extracellular recording techniques, with Lucifer Yellow CH dye injection to mark the recording site as being the so.n. Intracellular recordings from so.n. neurons revealed them to have an average membrane potential of -67 +/- 0.8 mV (mean +/- s.e.m.), membrane resistance of 145 +/- 9 M omega with linear current-voltage relations from 40 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction to the level of spike threshold in the depolarizing direction. Average cell time constant was 14 +/- 2.2 ms. So.n. action potentials ranged in amplitude from 55 to 95 mV, with a mean of 76 +/- 2 mV, and a spike width of 2.6 +/- 0.5 ms at 30% of maximal spike height. Both single spikes and trains of spikes were followed by a strong, long-lasting hyperpolarization with a decay fitted by a single exponential having a time constant of 8.6 +/- 1.8 ms. Action potentials could be blocked by 10(-6) M tetrodotoxin. Spontaneously active so.n. neurons were characterized by synaptic input in the form of excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, the latter being apparently blocked when 4 M KCl electrodes were used. Both forms of synaptic activity were blocked by application of divalent cations such as Mg2+, Mn2+ or Co2+. 74% of so.n. neurons fired spontaneously at rates exceeding 0.1 spikes per second, with a mean for all cells of 2.9 +/- 0.2 s-1. Of these cells, 21% fired slowly and continuously at 0.1 - 1.0 s-1, 45% fired continuously at greater than 1 Hz, and the remaining 34% fired phasically in bursts of activity followed by silence or low frequency firing. Spontaneously firing phasic cells showed a mean burst length of 16.7 +/- 4.5 s and a silent period of 28.2 +/- 4.2 s. Intracellular recordings revealed the presence of slow variations in membrane potential which modified the neuron's proximity to spike threshold, and controlled phasic firing. Variations in synaptic input were not observed to influence firing in phasic cells.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The neural circuit that controls the hearts in the leech comprises an ensemble of synaptically interconnected cardiac motor neurons (HE cells) and cardiac interneurons (HN cells). Both the HE cells and the HN cells constitute segmentally homologous sets. We have investigated the structure of these neurons by iontophoretic injection of Lucifer Yellow dye.Bilateral pairs of HE cells have been identified in segmental ganglia 3–19 of the nerve cord. Their structure was found to be nearly identical from ganglion to ganglion and from animal to animal.Bilateral pairs of HN cells have been identified in segmental ganglia 1–7 of the nerve cord. Their dendritic structure was found to vary from ganglion to ganglion. These segmental differences among HN cells were observed consistently from animal to animal. Some of the segmental differences in HN cell structure correlate with previously described physiological differences.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Abstract:  The action of the plant products quassin, cinnamaldehyde and azadirachtin was examined using pharmacological and electrophysiological methods. All three substances inhibited the beat rate of the antenna-heart, with quassin causing a diastolic and cinnamaldehyde a systolic block. Quassin delayed and azadirachtin at first accelerated the frequency of action potentials in the heart muscle, but 5 × 10−3  m of the latter compound degraded the spike pattern and decreased the heart rate. A typical prolongation of the duration of the action potentials was observed. In recordings from a nerve of the frontal ganglion, quassin and cinnamaldehyde reduced the intervals between the spontaneous bursts, which turned into a continuous spike discharge with a decline in activity, while azadirachtin had no effect. Measurements in a single neurone of this ganglion revealed that quassin had a suppressive effect on the frequency and amplitude of the action potentials. These results suggest that the physiological effects demonstrated do not cause the primary insecticidal actions of these plant products.  相似文献   

16.
Swimming in reduced electrophysiological preparations of the pteropod mollusc, Clione limacina, was blocked by bath application of hexamethonium even though pattern generator activity continued with this treatment. Neuromuscular recordings indicated that hexamethonium blocked synaptic input from Pd-3 and Pd-4 motoneurons to slow-twitch muscle cells, while connections from Pd-1A and Pd-2A motoneurons to fast-twitch muscle cells were variable in their response to hexamethonium—synaptic inputs were suppressed in most cases and occasionally blocked, but the latter only with high concentrations and long incubations. Acutely dissociated wing muscle cells showed a concentration-dependency in the percentage of contracted cells with bath application of acetylcholine, and this contractile activity was blocked in preparations that were first bathed in hexamethonium. Intracellular recordings from dissociated slow-twitch muscle cells showed conductance-increase depolarizations of approximately 20 mV following 1 s pressure ejections of 10−4 M acetylcholine from micropipettes placed immediately adjacent to the muscle cells. These responses were blocked when hexamethonium was bath applied prior to the pressure-applied acetylcholine. The results suggest the Pd-3/Pd-4 motoneuron to slow-twitch muscle cell junctions are cholinergic with nicotinic-like receptors, while the Pd-1A/Pd-2A to fast-twitch muscle cell connections are likely cholinergic, but with a different receptor type.  相似文献   

17.
Electrical Interaction of Paired Ganglion Cells in the Leech   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The two paired giant ganglion cells (PGC's) found in each ganglion of the leech central nervous system fire synchronously in response to certain sensory input. Polarizing current passed into either of these cells is seen to displace the membrane potentials of both cells, the voltage attenuation between the two somata ranging from 2 to 5 times. This attenuation factor remains unchanged when the direction of the polarizing current is reversed, and remains about the same when the other cell of the pair is directly polarized. When one of the PGC's is partially depolarized with outward current, a repetitive train of impulses is generated. Each spike is followed by a spike in the other cell. Occasionally, a small subspike potential is seen in place of a follower spike. This potential appears to differ in shape and time course from synaptic potentials elicited by afferent input to these cells, and appears rather to be an electrotonic potential derived from the prejunctional impulse in the stimulated PGC. It is proposed that transmission between these cells is electrical, being accomplished by a flow of local circuit current across a non-rectifying junction or connection to the spike-initiating region of the other PGC.  相似文献   

18.
A most prominent feature of neurons in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is the circadian rhythm in spontaneous firing frequency. To disclose synaptic mechanisms associated with the rhythmic activity, the spontaneous postsynaptic activity was studied using whole-cell, patch clamp recordings in the ventral region of the SCN in slice preparations from rats. The synaptic events were compared between two time intervals corresponding to the highest and lowest electrical activity within the SCN during subjective daytime and nighttime, respectively. The gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-mediated spontaneous inhibitory activity showed no diurnal variations, but the excitatory activity was markedly higher in frequency, without differences in amplitude, during the subjective day compared to the subjective night. Spontaneous and evoked inhibitory synaptic events were blocked by the GABA(A) receptor antagonist bicuculline. The alpha-amino-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid (AMPA/kainate) receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2, 3-dione (CNQX) blocked most of the excitatory activity. In addition, CNQX reduced the spontaneous inhibitory activity. The N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist D-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid reduced the inhibitory activity to a lesser degree, and there was no significant difference in amplitude or frequency of synaptic events in control and Mg2+-free solutions, indicating that the AMPA receptor plays an important role in regulating the inhibitory release of GABA within the SCN. Ipsi- and contralateral stimulation of the SCN consistently evoked excitatory synaptic responses. Inhibitory synaptic responses occurred in some neurons upon increasing stimulus strength. In conclusion, this study shows that there is a substantial influence from spontaneous glutamatergic synapses on the ventral part of the SCN and that these exhibit daily variations in activity. Diurnal fluctuations in spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic activity within this network may contribute to the mechanisms for synchronization of rhythms between individual SCN neurons and may underlie the daily variations in the spontaneous firing frequency of SCN neurons.  相似文献   

19.
The laminin alpha4 chain is widely distributed in various mesodermal tissues, including the perineurium of peripheral nerves, dorsal root ganglion (DRG), skeletal muscle, and capillaries, and plays important roles in synaptic specialization at the neuromuscular junction and in microvascular formation. The C-terminal globular domain (G domain) of the laminin alpha4 chain was previously found to be critical for heparin binding and cell attachment activity. Here, we focused on neurite outgrowth activity of the laminin alpha4 chain G domain. We found that the recombinant alpha4 chain G domain protein (rec-alpha4G) promoted neurite outgrowth of rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. When 114 overlapping synthetic peptides that covered the entire G domain were tested for neurite outgrowth activity, nine peptides were active, but the 105 remaining peptides did not exhibit activity. Three of the nine active peptides, A4G6 (LAIKNDNLVYVY), A4G20 (DVISLYNFKHIY), and A4G107 (VIRDSNVVQLDV), strongly promoted neurite outgrowth of PC12 cells. A4G107 was found to form amyloid-like fibrils in Congo red, X-ray, and electron microscopy analyses. We also synthesized cyclic peptides to evaluate their conformational requirements. Cyclic peptide A4G82X (cyc-A4G82X;TLFLAHGRLVFX, where X is norleucine) significantly enhanced neurite outgrowth activity, but the rest of the cyclic peptides eliminated the activity. The A4G82 sequence is located on the loop region, suggesting that the activity of A4G82 is required for a loop conformation. These peptides also exhibited neurite outgrowth activity with dorsal root ganglion (DRG) explants and with DRG cells from E14.5 mouse embryos, indicating that they are active in both neuronal cell lines and native neuronal cells. Taken together, the data suggest that the peptides from the laminin alpha4 chain G domain promote neurite outgrowth activity via a specific conformation.  相似文献   

20.
Intracellular microelectrode recordings have been made from probable motoneurons in the spinal cord of Xenopus laevis embryos during fictive 'swimming' in preparations paralysed with the neuromuscular blocking agent tubocurarine. These cells had resting potentials of -50 mV or more. During spontaneous or stimulus-evoked 'swimming' episodes: (a) the cells were tonically excited; the level of tonic synaptic excitation and the conductance increase underlying it were both inversely related to the 'swimming' cycle period; (b) the cells usually fired one spike per cycle in phase with the motor root burst on the same side; spikes did not overshoot zero and were evoked by phasic excitatory synaptic input on each cycle, superimposed on the tonic excitation; (c) in phase with motor root discharge on the opposite side of the body, the cells were hyperpolarized by a chloride-dependent inhibitory postsynaptic potential. The nature of synaptic potentials during 'swimming' was evaluated by means of intracellular current injections. The 'swimming' activity could be controlled by natural stimuli. The results provide clear evidence on the relation of tonic excitation to rhythmic locomotory pattern generation, and indirect evidence for reciprocal inhibitory coupling between antagonistic motor systems.  相似文献   

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