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1.
The heart of the nudibranch mollusc Archidoris montereyensis is regulated by a small number of powerful effector neurons located in the right pleural and visceral ganglia. Two identifiable neurons in the pleural ganglion, a heart excitor (PlHE) and a heart inhibitor (PlHI), are especially important regulators of cardiac function in that low levels of spontaneous activity in either cell significantly alters the amplitude and rate of heart contractions. These neurons have extensive dendritic arbors within the right pleural ganglion and branching axonal processes within the visceral ganglion. The visceral ganglion also contains a heart excitor neuron (VHE) and at least two heart inhibitor neurons (VHI cells), but their influence on cardiac activity is weaker than that of the pleural ganglion cells. All of these heart effector cells appear to be motor neurons with axons that terminate predominantly in the atrio-ventricular valve region of the heart via the pericardial nerve. The simplicity and strength of these neuronal connections to the heart of Archidoris make this a favorable preparation for studies of cardiac regulation.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The heart of the nudibranch mollusc Archidoris montereyensis is regulated by a small number of powerful effector neurons located in the right pleural and visceral ganglia. Two identifiable neurons in the pleural ganglion, a heart excitor (plHE) and a heart inhibitor (PlHI), are especially important regulators of cardiac function in that low levels of spontaneous activity in either cell significantly alters the amplitude and rate of heart contractions. These neurons have extensive dendritic arbors within the right pleural ganglion and branching axonal processes within the visceral ganglion. The visceral ganglion also contains a heart excitor neuron (VHE) and at least two heart inhibitor neurons (VHI cells), but their influence on cardiac activity is weaker than that of the pleural ganglion cells. All of these heart effector cells appear to be motor neurons with axons that terminate predominately in the atrio-ventricular valve region of the heart via the pericardial nerve. The simplicity and strength of these neuronal connections to the heart of Archidoris make this a favorable preparation for studies of cardiac regulation.Abbreviations Pl HE pleural ganglion heart excitor neuron - Pl HI pleural heart inhibitor neuron - V HE visceral ganglion heart excitor neuron - V HI cells, visceral heart inhibitor neurons - V K visceral kidney excitor neuron - V G visceral gill excitor neuron  相似文献   

3.
The central nervous system of freshwater pulmonary molluscs Lymnaea stagnalis and Planorbarins corneus was stained by the method of neurobiotin retrograde transport along optic nerve fibers. In the animals of both species, bodies and fibers of stained neurons are found in all ganglia except for the buccal ones. Afferent fibers of the optic nerve form a dense sensor neuropil located in a small volume of cerebral ganglia. Characteristic groups of neurons sending their processes into optic nerves both of ipsi- and of contralateral half of the body are described. Revealed among them are neurons of visceral and parietal ganglia, which simultaneously innervate both eyes as well as give projections into peripheral nerves. It is suggested that these neurons can perform function of integration of sensor signals and, on its base, regulate photosensitivity of retina as well as activity of peripheral organs. There is established the presence of bilateral connections of the mollusc eye with cells of pedal ganglia and statocysts, which seems to be the structural basis of manifestation of the known behavior forms associated with stimulation of visual inputs of the studied gastropod molluscs.  相似文献   

4.
The osphradial multisensory system of Lymnaea stagnalis L. (Pulmonata, Basommatophora) was used to demonstrate the modulation of chemosensory information both at periphery and central nervous system (CNS) following heavy metal treatments. A semi-intact preparation including osphradium, CNS and the right inner parietal nerve (r.i.p.n.) connecting them was used to record both extracellular activity of nerve and intracellular activity of central neurons receiving information from osphradium. The ion currents of osphradium were recorded using patch-clamp method. The changes in nerve and neuronal activity were expressed by averaging of firing frequency and interspike intervals. The chemosensory function of osphradium was shown by application of L-aspartate, urea, saccharose and stagnant water to its surface. The central neurons reacting to the stimulation ofosphradium were located to visceral, right parietal, pedal and cerebral ganglia of Lymnaea. Both the acute and chronic treatments with HgCl2 damaged the sensory function of osphradium traced on the flow of information from periphery to central neurons. At the same time, mercury chloride modified the synaptic connections of respiratory pattern generators as well as the Ca- and K-dependent ion currents of osphradial neurons. The results proved the multisensory role of osphradium sensing the alterations in the environment and its usefulness in monitoring the effects of pollutants at various level of regulation from chemosensory epithelium to CNS.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The distribution of monoamines inLimax maximus was studied by the histochemical fluorescent method of Falck and Hillarp. The number of 5-HT-containing and catecholamine-containing perikarya in the central nervous system is small compared with the non-fluorescent perikarya. However, all the ganglia except the proto-cerebral ganglia have some amine-containing neurons. There are relatively larger numbers of fluorescent cells in the cerebral, visceral, pedal and right parietal ganglia than in the other ganglia. A single, giant 5-HT-containing neuron was observed in each meta-cerebral ganglion.Monoamine neurons are localised in a number of peripheral tissues (heart, integument, tentacles, penis retractor muscle, sole of foot, kidney, alimentary canal, reproductive organs and tentacular, pharyngeal and cephalic retractor muscles). Neurons containing catecholamine are mostly associated with sensory structures such as the statocysts, the retina of the eye and the integument of the tentacles, whereas 5-HT-containing nerve fibres are mainly observed in muscle tissues.We wish to thank the Wellcome Trust for financial support.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Involvement of neuropeptides in the regulation of cardiac activity in a prosobranch mollusc, Rapana thomasiana, was studied physiologically as well as immunohistochemically. A catch-relaxing peptide (CARP) showed strong inhibitory effects on the heart with a lower threshold than acetylcholine. The action of CARP was in contrast to that of another neuropeptide, FMRFamide, which has previously been shown to enhance the heart beat. Benzoquinonium blocked the effects of acetylcholine and stimulation of right cardiac nerves 1 and 3b, but not those of CARP, suggesting that the effects of nerve stimulation are mainly due to the release of acetylcholine. Immunohistochemical examinations demonstrated that FMRFamide-like and CARP-like immunoreactive neurons are distributed in the visceral ganglia. Although a neuron appeared to show weak immunoreactivity to both antisera, evidence for the coexistence of peptides in a single neuron was not exhibited. Positive immunoreactivity to FMRFamide and CARP antisera also appeared in right cardiac nerves 1 and 3. In the heart, FMRFamide- and CARP-like immunoreactive fibers were restricted to the atrium and the aortic end of the ventricle, consistent with the morphological observation of innervation. The present results suggest that FMRFamide- and CARP-like peptides are involved in regulating the heart beat.  相似文献   

7.
The frontal ganglion of the silkworm (Bombyx mori) gives rise to a visceral nerve, branches of which include a pair of anterior cardiac nerves and a pair of the posterior cardiac nerves. Forward-fill of the visceral nerve with dextran labeled with tetramethyl rhodamine shows the anterior cardiac nerves innervate the anterior region of the dorsal vessel. Back-fill of the anterior cardiac nerves with Co2+ and Ni2+ ions and the fluorescent dye reveals that the cell bodies of two motor neurons are located in the frontal ganglion. Injection of 5, 6-carboxyfluorescein into the cell body of an identified motor neuron shows that the neuron gives rise to an axon running to the visceral nerve. Unitary excitatory junctional potentials (EJPs) were recorded from a myocardial cell at the anterior end of the heart. They responded in a one-to-one manner to electrical stimuli applied to the visceral nerve, or to impulses generated by a depolarizing current injected into the cell body. EJPs induced by stimuli at higher than 0.5 Hz showed facilitation while those induced at higher than 2 Hz showed summation. Individual EJPs without summation, or a train of EJPs with summation, caused acceleration in the phase of posterograde heartbeat and heart reversal from anterograde heartbeat to posterograde heartbeat. It is likely that the innervation of the anterior region of the dorsal vessel by the motor neurons, through the anterior cardiac nerves is responsible for the control of heartbeat in Lepidoptera, at least in part.  相似文献   

8.
1. Leydig neurons fire spontaneously at low rates (less than 4 Hz), but their activity increases with mechanical stimulation or electrical stimulation of mechanosensory neurons. These conditions also cause acceleration of bursting in heart motor neurons. 2. The firing rate of Leydig cells was found to regulate heart rate in chains of isolated ganglia. When Leydig neurons were made to fire action potentials at relatively high frequencies (ca. 5-10 Hz), however, heart motor neurons ceased bursting and were either silenced or fired erratically. 3. Firing of Leydig neurons at high rates caused bilateral heart interneurons of ganglia 3 or 4 to fire tonically rather than in their normal alternating bursts Tonic firing of these heart interneurons accounts for the prolonged barrages of ipsps recorded in heart motor neurons and the disruption of their normal cyclic activity. 4. Preventing spontaneous activity of Leydig neurons with injected currents in isolated ganglia caused deceleration of the heartbeat rhythm but did not halt oscillation. 5. Electrical stimulation of peripheral nerve roots with Leydig neuron activity suppressed in isolated ganglia caused acceleration of heart rate.  相似文献   

9.
Central nervous system of freshwater pulmonate molluscs Lymnaea stagnalis and Planorbarius corneus was stained using retrograde transport of neurobiotin in the optic tract fibers. In both species, perikarya and fibers of the stained neurons are found in all ganglia except the buccal ones. Afferent fibers of the optic nerve form dense sensory neuropil located in relatively small volume of cerebral ganglia. Typical neuronal groups sending their processes into the optic nerves of ipsilateral and contralateral body halves are described. Among them, neurons of visceral and parietal ganglia innervating both eyes concurrently as well as sending projections into peripheral nerves are revealed. These neurons, supposedly, have a function to integrate sensory signals, which may be a basis for regulation of light sensitivity of retina and functioning of peripheral organs. Bilateral links of the molluscan eye with the pedal ganglia cells and statocysts are found, which is, likely, a structural basis of certain known behavioral patterns related to stimulation of visual inputs in the studied gastropod molluscs.  相似文献   

10.
Two giant neurons, v- RPLN (ventral-right parietal large neuron) and v- VNAN (ventral-visceral noisy autoactive neuron), were identified on the ventral surface in the caudal part of the suboesophageal ganglia of the African giant snail (Achatina fulica F erussac ), and their pharmacological features to the common putative neurotransmitters and their related substances were examined. The giant neuron examined, v- RPLN , is situated in front of the exit of the right anterior pallial nerve in the right parietal ganglion. The neuron, which is 250-300 microns in diameter, one of the largest neurons in the ganglia, was usually silent without spontaneous firing. The neuron was excited by L-norepinephrine (L-NE), DL-octopamine (DL-OA), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), L-homocysteic acid (L-HCA) and erythro-beta-hydroxy-L-glutamic acid (erythro-L- BHGA ); and inhibited by dopamine (DA), GABA, acetylcholine (Ach) and its related substances. Another giant neuron examined, v- VNAN , is situated very close to the right side of the exit of the right posterior pallial nerve in the visceral ganglion. The neuron is elliptical and about 150 micron in diameter. It showed spontaneous firing highly modified by the synaptic influences. DA, 5-HT, glycine (Gly), GABA and its related substances, L-HCA, erythro-L- BHGA , and Ach and its related substances all had the direct (not via synaptic influences) excitatory effects on the neuromembrane examined. Some of them, for example, L-NE, 5-HT and Ach and its related substances caused transient excitation of the neuron, probably due to the synaptic influences, immediately after their application. No substance producing any inhibition of the neuron could be found in the present study.  相似文献   

11.
Although Schmalz described the innervation of the ovotestis in pulmonate snails as early as 1914, no functions have been attributed to it. In H. aspersa, the intestinal nerve branches profusely within the ovotestis and terminates in the walls of the acini and in the sheath surrounding the early portion of the hermaphroditic duct. We found both sensory and motor functions for this innervation. Significantly, there is a tonic sensory discharge generated by the mechanical pressure of growing oocytes, and the level of tonic afferent activity is strongly correlated with the number of ripe oocytes; this is probably a permissive signal that gates ovulation. Tactile stimulation of the ovotestis causes a phasic sensory discharge and a pronounced cardio activation. Also, an efferent discharge is elicited in the ovotestis branch of the intestinal nerve. To study the motor consequences of efferent activity, the ovotestis branch was electrically stimulated. We found that such stimulation evokes peristaltic contractions of the initial portion of the hermaphroditic duct and increases beat frequencies of the cilia that line the interior of the duct. These effects could facilitate the transport of oocytes down the duct. Still other functions of afferent activity are implied by changes in the spontaneous activity of mesocerebral cells following nerve stimulation. Putative sensory neurons and putative motoneurons have been identified in the visceral and right parietal ganglia.  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of FMRFamide-immunoreactive neurons in the central nervous system of the freshwater pulmonate, Helisoma duryi is described. All parts of the central nervous system except the two pleural and the right parietal ganglia, contain immunoreactive neurons. By immunogold techniques, only one kind of neurosecretory FMRFamide-immunoreactive cell (previously identified as the type-3 cell) was localized in the visceral and left parietal ganglia. This cell type has been previously implicated in an antidiuretic role. FMRFamide-immunoreactive material is found in the whole mount of the kidney as well as in kidney sections. Electron microscopic examination shows that the axons innervating either the smooth muscles of the kidney or the kidney itself contain neurosecretory granules morphologically similar to type-3 cells of the visceral and left parietal ganglia. When incubated in saline containing nanogram quantities of FMRFamide, the wet weight of the kidney increased. It is suggested that FMRFamide-like substance may function as an antidiuretic factor and that the kidney is a target organ of this peptide for osmoregulation.  相似文献   

13.
1. Coexistence of FMRFamide, met-enkephalin and serotonin immunoreactivities was examined in Achatina fulica and Aplysia kurodai. 2. Coexistence of FMRFamide and serotonin was found in some neurons of the visceral, right parietal and pedal ganglia of Achatina fulica, and in the pedal ganglion of Aplysia kurodai. 3. In Achatina fulica, coexistence of FMRFamide and met-enkephalin was found in a neuron of the left parietal ganglion and that of met-enkephalin and serotonin was found in a giant neuron of the right parietal ganglion. 4. Based on these results, the biological significance of coexistence was discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The distribution of serotonin (5HT)-containing neurons in the central nervous system of the snail Helix pomatia has been determined in whole-mount preparations by use of immunocytochemical and in vivo 5,6-dihydroxy-tryptamine labelling. 5HT-immunoreactive neuronal somata occur in all but the buccal and pleural ganglia. Immunoreactive fibres are present throughout the central nervous system. The 5HT-immunoreactive neuronal somata characteristically appear in groups, located mainly in the cerebral, pedal, visceral and right parietal ganglia. The majority of 5HT-immunoreactive neurons is located in the pedal ganglia. Additionally a dense network of 5HT-immunoreactive varicose fibres is found in the neural sheath of the central nervous system including all the nerves and ganglia. The number and distribution of 5HT-immunoreactive neurons correlates with that demonstrated by 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine labelling method.  相似文献   

15.
We examined regulation of the myogenic heart by two identified cardioacceleratory neurons (CA1, CA2) in early juveniles of the isopod Ligia exotica. Repetitive stimulation of either the CA1 or CA2 axon increased the frequency and plateau amplitude of the action potential and decreased the maximum hyperpolarization of the cardiac muscle. These effects were larger with increasing stimulus frequency. The rate of increase in the frequency caused by CA1 stimulation was significantly larger than that by CA2. No impulse activity of the cardiac ganglion was induced by acceleratory nerve stimulation. The frequency of the muscle activity was decreased by injection of a hyperpolarizing current into the muscle during stimulation of the acceleratory nerve. In a quiescent heart, acceleratory nerve stimulation caused an overall depolarization in the muscle membrane and the amplitude of the depolarization induced by CA1 stimulation was significantly larger than that by CA2. These results suggest that CA1 and CA2 neurons regulate the myogenic heart affecting directly the cardiac muscle; the CA1 neuron produces more potent effects than does the CA2 neuron.  相似文献   

16.
Responses of nerve cells to puncture, to touching the surface of the mollusk leg, osmotic stimulation, and extracellular microiontophoretic injection of acetylcholine, noradrenalin, serotonin, atropine, and propranolol were recorded intracellularly in the right parietal, left pedal, and visceral ganglia of the unisolated circumpharyngeal ring ofLimnaea stagnalis. Selective sensitivity of the neurons to the biologically active substances was observed. Results indicative of the functional differences between the various ganglia and of their neurochemical organization were obtained. Selective blocking of the unit responses to puncture of the surface of the mollusk leg by atropine or propranolol suggests that different forms of excitation reaching the central neurons evoked different and specific neurochemical processes on their subsynaptic membranes which can retain the essential informativeness of the widely different afferent volleys converging on a single nerve cell.I. M. Sechenov First Moscow Medical Institute. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 5, No. 5, pp. 510–518, September–October, 1973.  相似文献   

17.
The aim of the present study was to examine the distribution of cells expressing connexin 26 (Cx26) in the suboesophageal visceral, left and right parietal and left and right pleural ganglia of the snail Helix aspersa by immunocytochemistry. Altogether we have found approximately 452 immunoreactive neurons which represent the 4.7% of the total neurons counted. The stained large neurons (measured diameter 55-140 microm) occurred mostly on the peripheral surface of the ganglia while the small immunostained cells (5-25 microm diameter) were observed in groups near the neuropil. The number of large neurons giving positive Cx26-like immunostaining was small in comparison with that for medium (30-50 microm diameter) and small sized cells. The expression of Cx26 was also observed in the processes of glia cells localized among neurons somata and in the neuropil showing that the antiserum recognized epitopes in both protoplasmic and fibrous glia cells of Helix aspersa. The neuropils of all ganglia showed fibers densely immunostained. While we have observed a good specificity for Cx26-antiserum in neurons, a lack of reaction for Cx43 antiserum was observed in neurons and glia cells. The reaction for enolase antiserum in neurons was light and non-specific and a lack of reaction in glia cells and processes for GFAP antiserum was observed. Although the percentage of positive neurons for Cx26 antiserum was low is suggested that in normal physiological conditions or under stimulation the expression of connexin could be increased. The observed results can be considered of interest in the interpretation of Helix aspersa elemental two neuron networks synchronizing activity, observed under applied extremely low frequency magnetic fields.  相似文献   

18.
The regulation of the heartbeat by the two largest neurons, d-VLN and d-RPLN, on the dorsal surface of visceral and right parietal ganglia of Giant African snail, Achatina fulica, was examined. Using the new method of animal preparation, for the first time, discrete biphasic inhibitory-excitatory junction potentials (I-EJPs) in the heart and several muscles of the visceral sac were recorded. The duration of hyperpolarizing phase (H-phase) of biphasic I-EJPs was 269+/-5.6 ms (n=5), which is 2-3 times less than that of the cholinergic inhibitory JPs (682+/-68.5 ms, n=5). The H-phase of I-EJPs was not altered by the application of atropine, picrotoxine, succinylcholinchloride, D-tubocurarine and tetraethylammonium or substitution of Cl(-) ions. Even the low-frequency neuronal discharges (1-2 imp/s) evoked significant facilitation and potentiation of the H-phase. Between the multimodal neurons d-VLN/d-RPLN and mantle or visceral organs there is evidence of direct synaptic connections. These neurons were found to have no axonal branches in the intestinal nerve as once suspected but reach the heart through several other nerves. New giant heart motoneurons do not interact with previously identified cardioregulatory neurons.  相似文献   

19.
Afferent signaling via the vagus nerve transmits important general visceral information to the central nervous system from many diverse receptors located in the organs of the abdomen and thorax. The vagus nerve communicates information from stimuli such as heart rate, blood pressure, bronchopulmonary irritation, and gastrointestinal distension to the nucleus of solitary tract of the medulla. The cell bodies of the vagus nerve are located in the nodose and petrosal ganglia, of which the majority are located in the former. The nodose ganglia contain a wealth of receptors for amino acids, monoamines, neuropeptides, and other neurochemicals that can modify afferent vagus nerve activity. Modifying vagal afferents through systemic peripheral drug treatments targeted at the receptors on nodose ganglia has the potential of treating diseases such as sleep apnea, gastroesophageal reflux disease, or chronic cough. The protocol here describes a method of injection neurochemicals directly into the nodose ganglion. Injecting neurochemicals directly into the nodose ganglia allows study of effects solely on cell bodies that modulate afferent nerve activity, and prevents the complication of involving the central nervous system as seen in systemic neurochemical treatment. Using readily available and inexpensive equipment, intranodose ganglia injections are easily done in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this work was to characterize several ionic channels in nervous cells of the suboesophageal visceral, left and right parietal, and left and right pleural brain ganglia complex of the snail Helix aspersa by immunocytochemistry. We have studied the immunostaining reaction for a wide panel of eleven polyclonal antibodies raised against mammal antigens as follows: voltage-gated-Na+ channel; voltage-gated-delayed-rectifier-K+ channel; SK2-small-conductance-Ca2+-dependent-K+ channel apamin sensitive; SK3 potassium channel; charybdotoxin-sensitive voltage-dependent potassium channel; BKCa-maxi-conductance-Ca2+-dependent-K+ channel; hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated potassium channel 4; G-protein-activated inwardly rectifying potassium channel GIRK2 and voltage-gated-calcium of L, N and P/Q type channels. Our results show positive reaction in neurons, but neither in glia cells nor in processes in the Helix suboesophageal ganglia. Our results suggest the occurrence of molecules in Helix neurons sharing antigenic determinants with mammal ionic channels. The reaction density and distribution of immunoreactive staining within neurons is specific for each one of the antisera tested. The studies of co-localization of immunoreaction, on alternate serial sections of the anterior right parietal ganglion, have shown for several recognized mapped neurons that they can simultaneously be expressed among two and seven different ionic protein channels. These results are considered a key structural support for the interpretation of Helix aspersa neuron electrophysiological activity.  相似文献   

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