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1.
Repeated tactile stimulation of the siphon in Aphysia normally results in habituation of the gill withdrawal reflex and a concomitant decrease in the amplitude of the excitatory synaptic input ot gill motor neurons in the abdominal ganglion. It was found, however, that induced low-level tonic activity in motor neuron L9, which does not itself elicit a gill withdrawal movement, prevented habituation of the reflex from occurring. Further, in preparations already habituated, this tonic low-level activity brought about a reversal of habituation. Although tonic L9 activity prevented the occurrence of habituation or brought about its reversal, it did not interfere with the synaptic decremental process which normally accompanies gill reflex habituation. Motor neurons L7 and LDG1 were found not to possess this ability of L9 to modulate gill reflex habituation. Evidence suggests that L9's modulatory effect is mediated in the periphery, in the gill and not centrally in the abdominal ganglion.  相似文献   

2.
The constituent elements of the gills of Aplysia kurodai and A. juliana were examined for the presence of biogenic amines using histochemical, immunocytochemical, and HPLC techniques. Aminergic elements were revealed by glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence in the branchial nerve, branchial ganglion, branchial vessels, and pinnules in both species. Three types of fluorescent cells were found in the neural plexus of the gill in each species. Two of them might be sensory neurons. Although HPLC analysis showed the presence of serotonin and dopamine in all gill structures including fluorescent neural elements, there were regional differences in concentrations of the monoamines. It was noted in the pinnules that there was a much higher concentration of dopamine than serotonin. Serotonin immunocytochemistry revealed neural processes which were immunoreactive to antiserotonin antibody, but serotonin immunoreactivity could not be found in a population of branchioganglionic neuron (BGN) somata. Serotonergic elements in the ganglion may be processes of the central ganglion, while dopaminergic elements may be processes of neurons in the neural plexus, located beyond the branchial ganglion. BGNs were activated by bath-applied dopamine and serotonin. These results suggest that dopaminergic sensory inputs from the neural plexus and serotonergic descending inputs from the abdominal ganglion may be among the inputs received by BGNs. It was found that serotonin depressed excitatory junctional potentials in muscle cells of the efferent branchial vessel, which were induced by an identified neuron of the abdominal ganglion. The aminergic cellular organization of the gill may involve serotonergic presynaptic-inhibitory fibers arising from the abdominal ganglion.  相似文献   

3.
The suprafusion of two endogenous neuropeptides, arginine vasotocin (AVT) and small cardioactive peptide B (SCPB), over the abdominal ganglion of Aplysia californica significantly affects the ability of a central gill motor neuron to elicit a gill withdrawal response. Gill motor neurons L7 or LDG1 were depolarized to produce the same number of action potentials (APs) on each trial. When AVT (10(-6)M) was suprafused, the motor neurons' ability to elicit a gill movement was suppressed; while SCPB (10(-6)M) superfusion facilitated the response. Neither peptide altered the passive membrane properties of the motor neurons nor did they affect the duration of their APs. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the peptides act via central control neurons which exert both suppressive and facilitatory control over gill reflex behaviors and associated neural activity.  相似文献   

4.
Repeated tactile stimulation of the siphon in Aplysia normally results in habituation of the gill withdrawal reflex and a concomitant decrease in the amplitude of the excitatory synaptic input to gill motor neurons in the abdominal ganglion. It was found, however, that induced low-level tonic activity in motor neuron L9, which does not itself elicit a gill withdrawal movement, prevented habituation of the reflex from occurring. Further, in preparations already habituated, this tonic low-level activity brought about a reversal of habituation. Although tonic L9 activity prevented the occurrence of habituation or brought about its reversal, it did not interfere with the synaptic decremental process which normally accompanies gill reflex habituation. Motor neurons L7 and LDG1 were found not to possess this ability of L9 to modulate gill reflex habituation. Evidence suggests that L9's modulatory effect is mediated in the periphery, in the gill and not centrally in the abdominal ganglion.  相似文献   

5.
Superfusion of clinical concentrations of enflurane (0.5% or 1.0%), an inhalation anaesthetic, over the abdominal ganglion ofAplysia significantly affected the amplitude of the gill withdrawal reflex evoked by tactile stimulation of the siphon. Enflurane superfusion (0.5%) suppressed the gill withdrawal reflex amplitude (to 46.1% of control; P<0.001 vs control) in eight of ten experiments. In the remaining two experiments, enflurane superfusion of the abdominal ganglion significantly facilitated the gill withdrawal reflex amplitude (174.5% of control;P<0.01). In addition, enflurane superfusion significantly reduced the number of action potentials evoked in central gill motor neurons by the siphon stimulation (to 47.1% of control;P<0.01) in six out of nine experiments. In one of the remaining three experiments, enflurane increased the number of action potentials evoked by the stimulus (to 200.0% of control). In two of the three, enflurane did not alter the numbet of action potentials. Behavioural responses were ‘uncoupled’ from the neuronal responses as a result of enflurane superfusion.  相似文献   

6.
1. Mechanical or electrical stimulation of isolated sections of body wall produced contractions that were graded with the intensity of the stimulus. Injury of body wall with shallow incisions produced extremely persistent contractions. 2. Long-lasting contraction of isolated body wall was also produced by brief application of "stimulated body wall wash" (SBW), sea water which was first washed through another section of body wall subjected to intense mechanical or electrical stimulation. Contractions were produced by SBW diluted to concentrations as low as 1% of the initial concentration. Contractions produced by prolonged application of SBW showed little fatigue, tachyphylaxis, or desensitization. 3. SBW caused contraction of isolated sections of body wall from all regions of the body, including tail, parapodia, siphon, purple gland, rhinophores, and anterior tentacles. SBW also caused contraction of isolated lateral columellar muscle and of the gill. 4. 30 mM CoCl2 blocked the release of contractile factors into electrically stimulated body wall and reduced but did not abolish contractile responses of unstimulated body wall to perfused SBW. SBW contractions were unchanged by disconnection of the perfused tissue to the CNS. 5. Hemolymph collected from the neck of an intact donor following strong electrical stimulation of the tail or excision of a parapodium ('stimulated hemolymphh, SHL) caused long-lasting contractions which were larger than those produced by control hemolymph (CHL) collected prior to stimulation of the donor. 6. Similarities between body wall contractions produced by SHL and by SBW, including their occurrence in 30 mM CoCl2, suggest that some of the contractile activity in SHL may be directly released from traumatized body wall. 7. SHL caused significantly greater cardioacceleration of the isolated heart than did CHL. Similarities between the cardioacceleration produced by SHL and by SBW suggest that a source of cardiac activity in SHL may be traumatized body wall. 8. SBW suppressed the gill-withdrawal reflex when applied selectively to the sheathed or desheathed abdominal ganglion. SBW-induced suppression was associated with significant reduction of evoked spike activity in identified gill motor neurons. SHL collected 1-2 h after noxious stimulation caused weak but significant suppression of the gill-withdrawal reflex when applied to the fully sheathed abdominal ganglion.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Neuron L7 of the marine mollusc, Aplysia californica, is unique in that it innervates five different target tissues in the animal. We show that when L7 is grown in vitro with two of these targets, that is, muscle cells isolated from the auricle or the gill vein, newly formed L7 neurites contact the muscle cells. Chemical synapses are formed since intracellular stimulation of L7 elicits contraction of individual muscle cells. Interestingly, auricle muscles are also innervated by neuron RBhe and co-cultures of RBhe and auricle muscle cells also exhibit synapse formation. To explore the molecular basis for synaptogenesis between L7 and its targets, it would be useful to quantify the extent of synapse formation in vitro, that is, to determine how many muscle cells can be innervated by a single L7. We show that this can be attained by staining for cytochrome oxidase activity. Cultures of auricle and gill vein muscles were exposed to the appropriate neurotransmitter in order to elicit contraction. The cells were then fixed and stained. In both cases, only cells that contracted were stained and electron microscopy showed reaction product associated with the cristae of mitochondria. When this procedure was applied to cultures of L7 and muscle cells, 38 ± 2.8% (S.E.M.;n=7) of the cells on the neurites were stained and therefore responded to L7 stimulation. Thus, part of the L7-RBhe circuit can be assembled in vitro and the extent of synaptogenesis can be accurately quantitated.  相似文献   

9.
The superfusion (15 min) of arginine vasotocin (AVT; 10?9–10?12M) over the abdominal ganglion of Aplysia californica suppressed the amplitude of the gill withdrawal reflex evoked by tactile stimulation of the siphon, increased the rate of gill reflex habituation, and decreased the evoked synaptic activity to central gill motor neurons. The suppressive effects of AVT on gill reflex behaviors were not due to toxic effects of the hormone since the effects were completely reversible following washout and 3 h rest. The results obtained with AVT were similar to those previously found using the mammalian neuropeptide arginine vasopressin. AVT may act by increasing the activity of central neurons which exert suppressive control over both gill reflex behaviors and evoked activity to central gill motor neurons.  相似文献   

10.
Two neuropeptide precursor cDNAs (LUQ-1 and L5-67) have been recently isolated from the Left Upper Quadrant (LUQ) neurons of the abdominal ganglion of Aplysia californica (Shyamala, Fisher, and Scheller, 1986; Wickham and DesGroseillers, 1991). Using in situ hybridization techniques as well as dot blot and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays, we have studied the expression of these genes in the central nervous system (CNS) of Aplysia californica. The LUQ-1 gene was found to be expressed in neuron L5 in the abdominal ganglion, whereas the expression of the L5-67 gene was observed in the other four LUQ cells (L2-4 and L6). When in situ hybridization was performed on paraffin sections of the abdominal ganglion, clusters of smaller cells located in the left hemiganglion, were also found to express either the LUQ-1 on the L5-67 gene, never both. In many sections, the mRNAs coding for the two neuropeptides were found not only in cell bodies but also in the axon of individual LUQ neurons and even as far as the pericardial nerve. The presence of neuropeptide mRNA in axons, pericardial nerve, and kidney has been confirmed by polymerase chain reaction. A specific, although diffuse hybridization in the left upper quadrant also suggests that mRNA is present in the neuritic field. Taken together these results indicate that neuron L5 is the only giant neuron expressing the LUQ-1 gene and might therefore have a physiological function different from the other four LUQ cells. Neuropeptide mRNAs were also found in the axon and/or the neuritic field of giant neurons and could play important roles related to cell signalling in axons and nerve termini.  相似文献   

11.
Acetylcholine has been suggested as a neurotransmitter released in the Aplysia gill by peripheral afferents of central neurons and by peripheral neurons within the gill. The perfused gill, isolated from the abdominal ganglion, was examined. At concentrations greater than 1 microM, acetylcholine elicited a slowly developing tonic contraction of the afferent vein that reversed upon washout. This effect was observed on both quiescent and active preparations. At concentrations less than 1 microM, acetylcholine perfusion resulted in a reduction of gill tone. The excitatory effect of acetylcholine was reduced 80 and 60% by the cholinergic antagonists atropine and hexamethonium, respectively. The acetylcholine-evoked contraction was potentiated 2.5-fold when curare was coinfused. Carbachol did not mimic the excitatory effects of acetylcholine. At all concentrations examined (1-100 microM), carbachol infusion reduced baseline tension, the amplitude of spontaneous contractions and contractions evoked by FMRFamide and dopamine. Contractions evoked by perfusion of p-chlorophenylthiocyclic AMP were greatly reduced when carbachol was added to the perfusate. Further addition of curare reversibly blocked carbachol inhibition of the cyclic AMP-evoked contractions. These findings suggest that excitatory and inhibitory cholinergic receptors are involved in the regulation of gill contractile behavior by acetylcholine.  相似文献   

12.
1.  The excitatory and inhibitory influences on the gill ofAplysia Juliana, which are mediated by the branchial nerve, were studied by means of electrophysiological techniques. Excitatory and inhibitory pathways in the nerve were stimulated simultaneously or selectively.
2.  The branchial nerve was found to contain both excitatory and inhibitory pathways which did not contain synapses in the branchial ganglion. The excitatory pathways caused longitudinal shortening of the gill along the efferent branchial vessel and the inhibitory pathways were modulatory, depressing the longitudinal shortening.
3.  Branchial nerve stimulation elicited two types of excitatory junctional potential (EJP), which were not mediated by the branchial ganglion, in a muscle cell of the efferent branchial vessel. One type was attributed to the central motor neuron and the other type to a motor neuron which is probably situated in the neural plexus of the gill periphery.
4.  Four inhibitory pathways from the central nervous system to the gill were found.
5.  Inhibitory junctional potentials (IJPs) recorded from muscle cells of the efferent branchial vessel in response to branchial nerve stimulation did not have monosynaptic characteristics. It is thought that inhibitory motor neurons which were activated by the branchial nerve might exist at the neural plexus of the gill.
6.  A single EJP which has been induced by a stimulus pulse applied to the excitatory pathway of the branchial nerve may be depressed in an all-or-none manner by a stimulus pulse applied to the inhibitory pathway, if this is done within a distinct short period prior to or after the stimulus inducing the EJP. This indicates that the central motor neuron receives presynaptic inhibition at its periphery.
7.  The motor neurons of the neural plexus seem to receive inhibitory innervation. Suppression of endogenous EJPs in the efferent vessel persisted for a long period even after cessation of stimulation.
8.  A certain branchioganglionic neuron (BGN) was found to receive inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) inputs from the branchial nerve.
9.  The multimodality of both the excitatory and the inhibitory pathways in the branchial nerve may explain the compound neural modulations of gill movements.
  相似文献   

13.
1. An electrophysiological analysis was made of gill ganglion neurons in Aplysia californica. 2. Gill ganglion neurons behave similarly to neurons in the abdominal ganglion (the central nervous systems; CNS) that are involved with gill withdrawal behaviors. 3. Some gill ganglion neurons are motor neurons much like those in the CNS. 4. Neurons in the gill ganglion are electronically and dye-coupled. In addition, they receive common chemical synaptic inputs from the Int-II network in the CNS. 5. Tactile stimulation of the gill or siphon evokes synaptic activity in gill ganglion neurons whether or not the CNS is present. 6. Pedal nerve stimulation results in synaptic activity in gill ganglion neurons and facilitates synaptic input evoked by tactile stimulation of the gill or siphon. 7. Antibody staining reveals serotonin-like fibers in the branchial nerve close to the gill ganglion but no cell bodies in the ganglion. 8. The gill ganglion may play a role in the mediation of adaptive gill reflex behaviors. It may be one of the loci where the CNS and peripheral nervous system (PNS) interact and form an integrated circuit to mediate gill withdrawal reflex (GWR) behaviors.  相似文献   

14.
The gill withdrawal reflex (GWR) to direct gill stimulation was studied in sexually mature Aplysia and in those older by at least two months. The GWR threshold in old Aplysia was five- to sevenfold higher than that in mature animals. In the habituation paradigm, the GWR amplitude decremented rapidly to zero in old animals whereas in mature animals it persisted for at least ten trials. The GWR could not be dishabituated in old animals. The GWR is an age-dependent behavior in that parieto-visceral ganglion suppression of the GWR appears to increase with age. Also the electrophysiological properties of two neurons in the parieto-visceral ganglion were compared in the two age groups: L7 a neuron which dishabituates the GWR in mature and not in old animals; and R2 which manifests cytological changes with age. In old animals L7′s input resistance was lower, the time constant was increased, and the size of the psp evoked by gill stimulation was smaller than those of mature L7s. Similar membrane changes with age were measured in R2. Soma size of L7 was approximately the same in the two age groups as was that of R2. The physiological parameters of neurons of known function continue to change during postmetamorphic life of Aplysia.  相似文献   

15.
The heart of the pteropod molluskClione limacina is innervated by the median nerve arising from the left abdominal ganglion. Five neurons sending axons to the heart have been identified in theClione central nervous system with retrograde cobalt or Lucifer yellow staining. Neuron H1 located in the left pedal ganglion produced an excitatory effect on heart beat. Stimulation of three neurons, H2–H4, situated in a compact group in the medial region of the left abdominal ganglion, led to inhibition of cardiac contraction, while H5, located in the caudal region of the left abdominal ganglion, did not affect heart beat. The activity of efferent cardiac neurons (ECN) was found to be related to the operation of the locomotor rhythm generator. Spontaneous or reflex depression of the latter was found to inhibit neuron H1 and activate units H2–H4. The behavior of these ECN accounts for the positive correlation between heart operation and locomotor activity inClione limacina.Institute of Research on Information Transmission, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow, M. V. Lomonosov State University, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 185–192, March–April, 1989.  相似文献   

16.
ABSTRACT. The influence of hypoxia and hypercapnia on the ventilatory rhythm of the hellgrammite Corydalus cornutus L. (Megaloptera) was studied. In intact animals the frequency of rhythmic retractions and protractions of abdominal gills is increased by hypoxia (10% O2, 90% N2) but no ventilatory response is elicited by hypercapnia (1–5% CO2, 20% O2, 75–79% N2).
The ventilatory motor pattern was examined by recording extracellularly from the gill retractor muscle or its efferent nerve. In response to hypoxia (8% 02, 92% N2), there are decreases in the cycle-time, the interspike interval, and the burst length of the gill retractor motorneuron. In addition, previously quiescent motorneurons associated with gill protraction are recruited.
Individual ganglia or small groups of abdominal ganglia can be isolated both from the central ganglionic chain and from the periphery by selective cutting of roots and connectives. When exposed to hypoxia, preparations that include the first abdominal ganglion show characteristic changes in the ventilatory motor pattern similar to those in intact animals. Thus sensitivity to oxygen appears to be located centrally and not peripherally. In small animals (head width < 7 mm), abdominal ganglia 2–3 and 2–7 respond characteristically to hypoxia, but in larger animals (head width > 9 mm), chains of ganglia lacking abdominal ganglion 1 fail to respond. In larger animals oxygen sensitivity may thus be concentrated in abdominal ganglion 1, whereas in smaller animals the ability to initiate a ventilatory response to hypoxia is distributed among the abdominal ganglia.  相似文献   

17.
The pyrokinin/pheromone-biosynthesis-activating neuropeptide (PBAN) family of peptides found in insects is characterized by a 5-amino-acid C-terminal sequence, FXPRLamide. The pentapeptide is the active core required for diverse physiological functions, including the stimulation of pheromone biosynthesis in female moths, muscle contraction, induction of embryonic diapause, melanization, acceleration of puparium formation, and termination of pupal diapause. We have used immunocytochemical techniques to demonstrate the presence of pyrokinin/PBAN-like peptides in the central nervous system of the fire ant, Solenopsis invicta. Polyclonal antisera against the C-terminal end of PBAN have revealed the location of the peptide-producing cell bodies and axons in the central nervous system. Immunoreactive material is detectable in at least three groups of neurons in the subesophageal ganglion and corpora cardiaca of all adult sexual forms. The ventral nerve cord of adults consists of two segmented thoracic ganglia and four segmented abdominal ganglia. Two immunoreactive pairs of neurons are present in the thoracic ganglia, and three neuron pairs in each of the first three abdominal ganglia. The terminal abdominal ganglion has no immunoreactive neurons. PBAN immunoreactive material found in abdominal neurons appears to be projected to perisympathetic organs connected to the abdominal ganglia. These results indicate that the fire ant nervous system contains pyrokinin/PBAN-like peptides, and that these peptides are released into the hemolymph. In support of our immunocytochemical results, significant pheromonotropic activity is found in fire ant brain-subesophageal ganglion extracts from all adult fire ant forms (queens, female and male alates, and workers) when extracts are injected into decapitated females of Helicoverpa zea. This is the first demonstration of the presence of pyrokinin/PBAN-like peptides and pheromonotropic activity in an ant species. This research was supported in part by a US-Israel Binational Science Foundation Grant (no. 2003367).  相似文献   

18.
We have tested the effect of a known insect neuromodulator, octopamine, on flight initiation in the cockroach. Using minimally dissected animals, we found that octopamine lowered the threshold for windevoked initiation of flight when applied to either of two major synaptic sites in the flight circuitry: 1) the last abdominal ganglion, where wind-sensitive neurons from the cerci excite dorsal giant interneurons, or 2) the metathoracic ganglion, where the dorsal giant interneurons activate interneurons and motoneurons which are involved in producing the rhythmic flight motor pattern in the flight muscles (Fig. 2).Correlated with this change in flight initiation threshold, we found that octopamine applied to the last abdominal ganglion increased the number of action potentials produced by individual dorsal giant interneurons when recruiting the cereal wind-sensitive neurons with wind puffs (Figs. 3, 4, 5) or with extracellular stimulation of their axons (Fig. 6). Octopamine increases the excitability of the giant interneurons (Figs. 7, 8). Also, when we stimulated individual dorsal giant interneurons intracellularly, the number of action potentials needed to initiate flight was reduced when octopamine was applied to the metathoracic ganglion (Fig. 9).Abbreviations EMG electromyogram - dGIs dorsal giant interneurons - GI giant interneuron - A6 sixth abdominal ganglion - T3 third thoracic ganglion - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential  相似文献   

19.
Modulation of the Aplysia gill withdrawal reflex by dopamine   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The ability of dopamine to modulate gill contractions was tested in Aplysia. When dopamine was perfused through the gill vasculature, gill contractions caused by siphon stimulation (gill withdrawal reflex) and by depolarization of the gill motor neuron L7 were increased in amplitude, as compared with those evoked during seawater perfusion. Habituation of gill movements, brought about by repetitive stimulation of the siphon or of L7, was prevented by dopamine. Despite the absence of reflex habituation, the number of action potentials in central gill motor neurons, evoked by siphon stimulation, showed normal decrement. Dopamine's effects were blocked when the ctenidial nerve was cut or when L7 hyperpolarized. These data suggest that dopamine acts peripherally to increase the efficacy of L7's synaptic transmission onto gill muscle or elements of the gill neural plexus.  相似文献   

20.
In experiments on the subpharyngeal complex of the Helix ganglia, we found an excitatory monosynaptic input to the pacemaker PPa2 neuron from an unidentified cell of the visceral ganglion and a polysynaptic inhibitory influence of another unidentified neuron of this ganglion on the PPa1 cell. In addition, we revealed three pairs of neurons synaptically connected with each other (excitatory connections) in the visceral ganglion. In the case where we used high-frequency (11 sec−1) stimulation of presynaptic elements, synaptic transmission to the PPa2 neuron demonstrated the greatest efficiency and stability. Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 39, No. 1, pp. 32–36, January–February, 2007.  相似文献   

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