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1.
Crustacean neuromuscular systems provide many advantages for the study of synaptic transmission and plasticity. The present study examines aspects of synaptic transmission in the phasic, fast closer excitor (FCE) motoneuron of regenerated crayfish claws. Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) fatigued rapidly and showed poor long-term facilitation (LTF) in the smallest of regenerating claws. EPSPs in larger regenerating claws fatigued less and showed pronounced facilitation. These observations were not the same as those previously made during primary development of this motoneuron (Lnenicka and Atwood, 1985a, J. Neuroscience 5:459-467). Hence, regeneration is not the recapitulation of primary development. In situ stimulation of the FCE is known to lead to long-lasting adaptation of synaptic performance. This adaptation is age dependent; it is expressed in young but not old animals. In the regenerated FCE of old animals, we observed a novel form of long-lasting adaptation to imposed activity: EPSPs showed large initial EPSPs and did not exhibit resistance to fatigue during maintained stimulation. This indicates that aged motoneurons can express adaptive changes to increased activity following axonal regeneration, but that the adaptive changes are the opposite to what is observed in nonregenerated motoneurons.  相似文献   

2.
Stimulation of the phasic (fast) motor axon of the isolated crayfish claw preparation at relatively low frequency (0.1 Hz) leads to depression of the excitatory junction potential (EJP) recorded from single muscle fibers. When the same stimulation is delivered following depression of the EJP at a higher frequency (5 Hz), a potentiated EJP appears, which is more resistant to low frequency depression. The potentiation appears to be analogous to "long-term facilitation" observed after stimulation of a tonic motor axon in crayfish and crabs. Long-term facilitation can be detected in preparations made from claws of animals in which the phasic motoneuron was stimulated at 5 Hz for 2 h in situ. This effect lasts for at least one day after one conditioning trial. Long-term facilitation is observed after stimulation of decentralized axons in situ, indicating that the change is attributable to local changes in terminal regions of the axon, and does not require the cell body. When electrodes are implanted in situ and the phasic motoneuron stimulated at 5 Hz for 2 h each day, synaptic depression becomes less pronounced and initial EJP amplitude becomes smaller over a period of several days. The latter changes, which adapt the neuron to a more tonic activity pattern, usually require several days for completion. Adaptation of fatigability occurs more rapidly than adaptation of initial EJP amplitude, and once established, remains for many days without further superimposed activity. Long-term adaptation does not occur in decentralized axons. Long-term facilitation and long-term adaptation are different responses of the neuron to enhanced activity. The former can occur in isolated or decentralized axons and leads to enhancement of EJP amplitude for a period of several hours to at least one day after a single episode of conditioning. The latter requires more time to be established, and leads to reduction of initial EJP amplitude and to lessened fatigability which persists for many days.  相似文献   

3.
1. Electrical stimulation of the rat's contralateral central amygdaloid (CAm) nucleus or the contralateral frontal cortex markedly augmented the antidromic field potential evoked by stimulation of mylohyoid (Myl) nerve. 2. This facilitation was shown to be due to EPSPs of the mylohyoid-anterior digastric (Myl-Dig) motoneurons. 3. In a few motoneurons, cortical EPSPs had fixed short latencies following high-frequency double stimuli and this is believed to be due to a monosynaptic pathway. 4. The amygdaloid or cortically evoked EPSPs relieved IS-SD blockade in a few motoneurons and also facilitated antidromic discharge in others which did not show any IS or M spike response to the same subthreshold antidromic stimulation. The underlying mechanisms are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Summary In locusts (Locusta migratoria) walking on a treadwheel, afferents of tarsal hair sensilla were stimulated via chronically implanted hook electrodes (Fig. 1). Stimuli applied to the middle leg tarsus elicited avoidance reflexes (Fig. 2). In quiescent animals, the leg was lifted off the ground and the femur adducted. In walking locusts, the response was phase-dependent. During the stance phase, no reaction was observed except occasional, premature triggering of swing movements; stimuli applied near the end of the swing phase were able to elicit an additional, short leg protraction.Central nervous correlates of phase-dependent reflex modulation were observed by recording intracellularly from motoneuron somata in walking animals. As a rule, motoneurons recruited during the swing phase showed excitatory stimulus-related responses around the end of the swing movement, correlated to the triggering of additional leg protractions (Figs. 3, 4, 5). Motoneurons active during the stance phase were often inhibited by tarsal stimulation, some showed only weak responses (Figs. 8, 9, 10). Common inhibitory motoneuron 1 was excited by tarsal stimulation during all phases of the leg movement (Figs. 6, 7). In one type of flexor tibiae motoneuron, a complex response pattern was observed, involving the inversion of stimulus-related synaptic potentials from excitatory, recorded during rest, to inhibitory, observed during long-lasting stance phases (Figs. 11, 12).The results demonstrate how reflex modulation is represented on the level of synaptic input to motoneurons. They further suggest independent gain control in parallel, antagonistic pathways converging onto the same motoneuron as a mechanism for reflex reversal during locomotion.Abbreviations CI 1 common inhibitory motoneuron (1) - EMG electromyogram - Feti fast extensor muscle of the tibia  相似文献   

5.
The nature of synaptic interaction between two neighboring motoneurons in the isolated frog spinal cord was studied by parallel insertion of two separate micro-electrodes into the cells. In 82 of 89 motoneurons tested transmission through synapses between the motoneurons was electrical in nature, as shown by the absence or short duration of the latent period of elementary intermotoneuronal EPSPs, stability of their amplitude, and preservation of responses in Ca++-free solution containing 2 mM Mn++. Direct electrotonic interaction was demonstrated in both directions: artificial de- and hyperpolarization of one motoneuron led to corresponding shifts of membrane potential in the neighboring motoneuron. The time constant of rise and decay of this potential was appreciably greater than the time constant of the membrane of the two interconnected motoneurons. Blockade of the SD-component of the action potential in the "triggering" motoneuron led to a decrease in the elementary EPSP in the neighboring motoneuron. These facts suggest that electrotonic interaction takes place through dendro-dendritic junctions. Absence of rectification was demonstrated in electrical synapses between motoneurons. In four cases elementary EPSPs were chemical in nature, for they appeared 1.3–3.3 msec after the beginning of the action potential in the "triggering" motoneuron, and were blocked in Ca++-free solution containing Mn++; fluctuations of their amplitude approximated closely to a Poisson or binomial distribution. Such responses are evidently generated by synapses formed by recurrent axon collaterals of one motoneuron on the neighboring motoneurons. In three cases elementary intermotoneuronal EPSPs consisted of two components, the first electrical and the second chemical in nature. Morphological structures which may be responsible for generation of 2-component EPSPs are examined.Deceased.I. M. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 16, No. 5, pp. 619–630, September–October, 1984.  相似文献   

6.
Cuticular strain associated with support of the shell of the hermit crab, Pagurus pollicarus, by its abdomen activates mechanoreceptors that evoke a stereotyped reflex in postural motoneurons. This reflex consists of three phases: a brief high-frequency burst of motoneuron spikes, a pause, and a much longer duration but lower frequency period of spiking. These phases are correlated with a rapid increase in muscle force followed by a slight decline to a level of tone that is greater than that at rest but less than maximal. The present experiments address the mechanisms underlying the transition from the first to second phase of the reflex and their role in force generation. Although centrally generated inhibitory post-synaptic potentials (IPSPS) are present during the pause period of the reflex, intracellular current injection of motoneurons reveals a spike frequency adaptation that rapidly and substantially reduces motoneuron firing frequency and is unchanged in saline that reduces synaptic transmission. The adaptation is voltage sensitive and persists for several hundred milliseconds upon repolarization. Hyperpolarization partially restores the initial response of the motoneuron to depolarizing current. Spike frequency adaptation and synaptic inhibition are important mechanisms in the generation of force that maintains abdominal stiffness at a constant, submaximal level.  相似文献   

7.
cAMP-dependence of synaptic depression and facilitation was investigated in functionally identified synaptic connection in the snail. It was found that 5 mM imidazole (phosphodiesterase activator) as well as 2 mM tolbutamide (inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase) do not change the rate of EPSPs depression during rhythmic (0.1 Hz) nerve stimulation, and do not affect facilitation. But treatment with both these drugs decreases EPSPs amplitude. Possibility of cAMP-dependent modulation of synaptic effectiveness is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Postsynaptic potentials evoked by stimulation of the motor cortex or pyramids before and after acute pyramidotomy were investigated in the lumbar motoneurons of monkeys. In response to activation of fibers of the pyramidal tract monosynaptic EPSPs predominated in motoneurons innervating the distal muscles of the hind limbs. Monosynaptic EPSPs in the motoneurons of the distal muscles had a significantly higher amplitude and could be evoked by weaker stimuli than EPSPs in the motoneurons of the proximal muscles. Cortico-motoneuronal EPSPs in the motoneurons of the distal muscles had a less marked frequency potentiation than EPSPs with monosynaptic segmental delay in the motoneurons of the proximal muscles. Cortico-extrapyramidal synaptic responses appeared in the pyramidotomized monkeys during intensive repetitive stimulation of the motor cortex in motoneurons of both distal and proximal muscles. These effects, transmitted by descending projections of the brain stem, may be responsible for the partial preservation of cortical motor control after pyramidotomy.I. M. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 6, pp. 587–596, November–December, 1972.  相似文献   

9.
1. In each right and left buccal ganglia of Aplysia kurodai, we identified 4 premotor neurons impinging on the ipsilateral jaw-closing and -opening motoneurons. Three of them (MA1 neurons) had features of multifunctional neurons. Current-induced spikes in the MA1 neurons produced excitatory junction potentials (EJPs) in the buccal muscle fibers. In addition, tactile stimulation of the buccal muscle surface produced a train of spikes in the MA1 neurons without synaptic input. The other neuron (MA2) had only a premotor function. 2. The MA1 and MA2 neurons had similar synaptic effects on the jaw-closing and -opening motoneurons. Current-induced spikes in the premotor neurons gave rise to monosynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in the ipsilateral jaw-closing motoneurons. Simultaneously, spikes in one of the MA1 neurons and the MA2 also gave rise to monosynaptic excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in the ipsilateral jaw-opening motoneuron. 3. The IPSPs and the EPSPs induced by spikes in the premotor neurons were reversibly blocked by d-tubocurarine and hexamethonium, respectively, suggesting that the MA1 and MA2 neurons are cholinergic. 4. When depolarizing and hyperpolarizing current pulses were passed into one premotor neuron, attenuated but similar potential changes were produced in another randomly selected premotor neuron in the same ganglion, suggesting that they are electronically coupled.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Axonal reaction of motoneurons has been shown to be usually accompanied by an early and brisk proliferation of perineuronal microgliacytes. In order to clarify the real nature of such newly formed microglial satellites and their fine structural relationships to the regenerating nerve cells, facial nuclei from bilateral preparations were examined by light and electron microscopy 4 days after cutting the right facial nerve in rats. On the transected side, microgliacytes could often be observed closely adjoining motoneuron perikarya and main dendrites over long distances, and thereby removing morphologically intact synaptic terminals from the neuronal surface membranes. This displacement of boutons by microglial cells is probably preceded by a loosening of the synaptic contacts due to some unknown membrane changes in the regenerating motoneurons. The functional significance of this considerable deafferentation process could not be entirely elucidated.  相似文献   

11.
Antidromic volleys in muscle nerves may facilitate monosynaptic reflexes originating from neighboring motoneurons. This facilitation has been studied in spinal cats. It is at its peak with a conditioning-test interval of 20 to 30 msec., and can last 50 to 100 msec. The threshold of facilitation is about the same as that of recurrent inhibition. Both phenomena appear to be activated by stimulation of the large motor axons. The latency of facilitation seems to be longer than that of recurrent inhibition by approximately 1 msec., suggesting the presence of at least one more synaptic delay. Facilitation often follows an inhibition of variable depth and duration. Frequently, however, the facilitation is not preceded by inhibition, and therefore it cannot be a rebound effect. The pharmacological properties of facilitation resemble those of recurrent inhibition. Dihydro-beta-erythroidine1 partially blocks facilitation; the peak is decreased and occurs earlier, and the duration is shortened. Eserine increases the duration of facilitation and inhibition and sometimes enhances their magnitude. It is concluded that recurrent facilitation is mediated by the cholinergic axon collaterals, and that at least two interneurons are located between collateral and motoneuron. Possible mechanisms of facilitation are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Experiments were conducted on anesthetized cats with microelectrode recording to study the synaptic responses that develop in the lumbar motoneurons on stimulation of the afferent fibers of groups II and III in the nerves of the ipsilateral and contralateral forelegs. Stimulation of these afferents evoked predominantly inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSP) in the extensor motoneurons and excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSP) in the flexor motoneurons. A basically inhibitory change in the rhythmic background activity developed under the influence of descending impulsation. The duration of the total inhibition of "spontaneous" motoneuron activity corresponded to the duration of the inhibitory influences exerted by the forelimb flexor-reflex afferents (FRA) on the interneurons. The interaction of the descending and segmental PSP resulted in inhibition and facilitation of the segmental responses in the motoneurons. The ultimate result of this interaction was determined by the shifts in the membrane potential of the motoneuron and by the effects created in the interneurons.I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 58–67, January–February, 1971.  相似文献   

13.
Long-term adaptation resulting in a 'tonic-like' state can be induced in phasic motor neurons of the crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, by daily low-frequency stimulation [Lnenicka, G.A., Atwood, H.L., 1985b. Long-term facilitation and long-term adaptation at synapses of a crayfish phasic motoneuron. J. Neurobiol. 16, 97-110]. To test the hypothesis that motor neurons undergoing adaptation show increased responses to the neuromodulator serotonin (5-HT), phasic motor neurons innervating the deep abdominal extensor muscles of crayfish were stimulated at 2.5 Hz, 2 h/day, for 7 days. One day after cessation of conditioning, contralateral control and conditioned motor neurons of the same segment were stimulated at 1 Hz and the induced excitatory post-synaptic potentials (EPSPs) were recorded from DEL(1) muscle fibers innervated by each motor neuron type. Recordings were made in saline without and with 100 nM 5-HT. EPSP amplitudes were increased by 5-HT exposure in all cases. Conditioned muscles exposed to 5-HT showed a 2-fold higher percentage of increase in EPSP amplitude than did control muscles. Thus, the conditioned motor neurons behaved like intrinsically tonic motoneurons in their response to 5-HT. While these results show that long-term adaptation (LTA) extends to 5-HT neuromodulation, no phenotype switch could be detected in the postsynaptic muscle. Protein isoform profiles, including the myosin heavy chains, do not change after 1 week of conditioning their innervating motor neurons.  相似文献   

14.
In a crayfish phasic neuromuscular junction, we have demonstrated low-frequency depression (LFD), high-frequency depression (HFD), and long-term facilitation (LTF) in response to different regimens of stimulation. Chronic stimulation of the phasic axon supplying the closer muscle of the claw in Procambarus clarkii resulted in diminished expression of HFD and LTF. Conversely, when impulse production in the phasic motoneuron was reduced by claw immobilization, both HFD and LTF were enhanced. LFD was insensitive to these manipulations. These results provide further evidence for long-term adaptation of the phasic neuromuscular junction to ongoing levels of impulse activity and illustrate the importance of a neuron's past history for synaptic plasticity. The ability of the neuron to adjust its short-term plasticity in response to altered experience constitutes an adaptive response that could be of general significance.  相似文献   

15.
Phasic or tonic nerves transplanted onto a denervated slow superficial flexor muscle in adult crayfish regenerated synaptic connections that displayed large or small excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs), respectively, suggesting that the neuron specifies the type of synapse that forms (Krause et al., J Neurophysiol 80:994-997, 1998). To test the hypothesis that such neuronal specification would extend to the synaptic structure as well, we examined the regenerated synaptic terminals with thin serial section electron microscopy. There are distinct differences in structure between regenerated phasic and tonic innervation. The phasic nerve provides more profuse innervation because innervation sites occurred more frequently and contained larger numbers of synaptic terminals than the tonic nerve. Preterminal axons of the phasic nerve also had many more sprouts than those of the tonic nerve. Phasic terminals were thinner and had a lower mitochondrial volume than their tonic counterparts. Phasic synapses were half the size of tonic ones, although their active zone-dense bars were similar in length. The density of active zones was higher in the phasic compared with the tonic innervation, based on estimates of the number of dense bars per synapse, per synaptic area, and per nerve terminal volume. Because these differences mirror those seen between phasic and tonic axons in crayfish muscle in situ, we conclude that the structure of the regenerated synaptic terminals identify with their transplanted axons rather than with their target muscle. Therefore, during neuromuscular regeneration in adult crayfish, the motoneuron appears to specify the identity of synaptic connections.  相似文献   

16.
Effects induced in motoneurons and interneurons of the cervical enlargements of the cat spinal cord by stimulation of the lateral and ventral funiculi at the lower thoracic level were studied under conditions producing degeneration of fibers of descending brain systems. Stimulation of this sort evoked PSPs (mainly of mixed character) in 57 of 90 motoneurons tested. In nine motoneurons the primary response consisted of monosynaptic EPSPs evoked by activity of fibers of the lateral funiculus, and in the rest it consisted of polysyanptic (at least disynaptic) EPSPs and IPSPs. Polysynaptic effects arising in the neuron in response to stimulation of the lateral and ventral funiculi usually differed only quantitatively. The intensity of excitatory synaptic action on motoneurons of the proximal muscle (especially thoracid) was much greater than that on motoneurons of distal muscles. Nearly all motoneurons with no synaptic action belonged to the latter group. Stimulation of the lateral and ventral funculi facilitated synaptic action induced in motoneurons by stimulation of high-threshold segmental afferents and led to excitation of interneurons located in the vectral quadrant, and had no effect on interneurons in the dorsal regions of gray matter. These effects are regarded mainly as the result of excitation of long ascending propriospinal pathways in the cervical parts of the cord; it is also postulated that some of them are evoked by the arrival of activity along collaterals of descending propiospinal pathways to the neurons in this region.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 11, No. 4, pp. 339–347, July–August, 1979.  相似文献   

17.
In adult crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, motoneurons to a denervated abdominal superficial flexor muscle regenerate long-lasting and highly specific synaptic connections as seen from recordings of excitatory postsynaptic potentials, even when they arise from the ganglion of another crayfish. To confirm the morphological origins of these physiological connections we examined the fine structure of the allotransplanted tissue that consisted of the third abdominal ganglion and the nerve to the superficial flexor muscle (the fourth ganglion and the connecting ventral nerve cord were also included). Although there is considerable degeneration, the allotransplanted ganglia display intact areas of axon tracts, neuropil, and somata. Thus in both short (6–8 weeks) and long (24–30 weeks) term transplants approximately 20 healthy somata are present and this is more than the five axons regenerated to the host muscle. The principal neurite and dendrites of these somata receive both excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs, and these types of synaptic contacts also occur among the dendritic profiles of the neuropil. Axon tracts in the allotransplanted ganglia and ventral nerve cord consist largely of small diameter axons; most of the large axons including the medial and lateral giant axons are lost. The transplanted ganglia have many blood vessels and blood lacunae ensuring long-term survival. The transplanted superficial flexor nerve regenerates from the ventral to the dorsal surface of the muscle where it has five axons, each consisting of many profiles rather than a single profile. This indicates sprouting of the individual axons and accounts for the enlarged size of the regenerated nerve. The regenerated axons give rise to normal-looking synaptic terminals with well-defined synaptic contacts and presynaptic dense bars or active zones. Some of these synaptic terminals lie in close proximity to degenerating terminals, suggesting that they may inhabit old sites and in this way ensure target specificity. The presence of intact somata, neuropil, and axon tracts are factors that would contribute to the spontaneous firing of the transplanted motoneurons. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
The nature of the synaptic relationship between 7 identified postural interneurons and 5 pairs of superficial motoneurons was examined by obtaining dual intracellular recordings from interneuron-motoneuron pairs in the lobster 2nd abdominal ganglion. For six different interneuron-motoneuron pairs EPSPs recorded from motoneurons occurred with a short (1 to 3 ms) fixed latency following each presynaptic spike recorded from the interneuron. This suggests that there is a monosynaptic relationship between these interneurons and motoneurons. Monosynaptic pathways accounted for 27% of all excitatory connections. Preliminary evidence indicates that the monosynaptic potentials are mediated by an excitatory chemical synapse since: all IPSPs occurred with latencies greater than 5 ms, there was no evidence for electrical coupling, and one of the interneurons produced facilitating PSPs. A majority of all monosynaptic connections were made by two of the flexion producing interneurons (FPIs), 201 and 301. The synaptic outputs of these FPIs were similar in that both made monosynaptic connections with a different bilaterally homologous pair of motoneurons. Both also produced larger EPSPs and more vigorous spiking in contralateral members of the bilateral motoneuron pairs. A previous study demonstrated that interneurons 201 and 301 are the only postural interneurons yet identified that express motor programs indistinguishable from command neurons. Taken together, these results suggest that certain intersegmental interneurons share properties with command neurons and driver neurons, and that there may not be a sharp morphological or functional distinction between these two cell types.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of penicillin on the membrane potential (MP) and synaptic activity of motoneurons in the isolated spinal cord of the river lamprey was investigated. In cells with a low initial MP (58.7±5.2 mV, n=28), penicillin (2.5 mmole·liter–1) caused a depolarization, and potentiated excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) that were evoked by stimulating spinal tracts and dorsal roots. The EPSPs were potentiated by 80–220% relative to their initial amplitude. In motoneurons with a higher MP (72.0±5.7 mV, n=20), a depolarization did not develop, and the potentiation of EPSPs did not exceed 25–70%. The effects of penicillin were inhibited when antagonists of excitatory and inhibitory amino acids were added to the superfusate. The results obtained imply that the motoneuron membranes have two acceptor sites for penicillin.Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg Institute of Biological Research, Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 24, No. 2, pp. 151–160, March–April, 1992.  相似文献   

20.
Summary In Manduca sexta larvae, sensory neurons innervating planta hairs on the tips of the prolegs make monosynaptic excitatory connections with motoneurons innervating proleg retractor muscles. Tactile stimulation of the hairs evokes reflex retraction of the proleg. In this study we examined activity-dependent changes in the amplitude of the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) evoked in a proleg motoneuron by stimulation of individual planta hair sensory neurons. Deflection of a planta hair caused a phasic-tonic response in the sensory neuron, with a mean peak instantaneous firing frequency of >300 Hz, and a tonic firing rate of 10–20 Hz. Direct electrical stimulation was used to activate individual sensory neurons to fire at a range of frequencies including those observed during natural stimulation of the hair. At relatively low firing rates (e.g., 1 Hz), EPSP amplitude was stable indefinitely. At higher instantaneous firing frequencies (>10 Hz), EPSPs were initially facilitated, but continuous stimulation led rapidly to synaptic depression. High-frequency activation of a sensory neuron could also produce post-tetanic potentiation, in which EPSP amplitude remained elevated for several min following a stimulus train. Facilitation, depression, and post-tetanic potentiation all appeared to be presynaptic phenomena. These activity-dependent changes in sensory transmission may contribute to the behavioral plasticity of the proleg withdrawal reflex observed in intact insects.Abbreviations ACh acetylcholine - AChE acetylcholine esterase - CNS central nervous system - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential - I h injected hyperpolarizing current - LTP long-term potentiation - PPR principal planta retractor motoneuron - PTP post-tetanic potentiation - R in input resistance - V h hyperpolarized potential - V m membrane potential - VN ventral nerve - VNA anterior branch of the ventral nerve - V r resting potential.  相似文献   

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