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1.
In many decapod crustaceans, escape tailflips are triggered by lateral giant (LG) and medial giant (MG) interneurons, which connect to motor giant (MoG) abdominal flexor neurons. Several decapods have lost some or all of these giant neurons, however. Because escape-related giant neurons have not been documented in palinurans, I examined tailflipping and abdominal nerve cords for giant neurons in two scyllarid lobster species, Ibacus peronii and Ibacus alticrenatus. Unlike decapods with giant neurons, Ibacus do not tailflip in response to sudden taps. Ibacus can perform non-giant tailflipping: the frequency of tailflips during swimming is adjusted by altering the gap between each individual tailflip. Abdominal nerve cord sections show no LG or MG interneurons. Backfilling nerve 3 of abdominal ganglia revealed no MoG neurons, and the fast flexor motor neuron population is otherwise identical to that described for crayfish. The loss of giant neurons in Ibacus represents an independent deletion of these cells compared to other reptantian decapods known to have lost these giant neurons. This loss is correlated with the normal posture in scyllarids, in which the last two abdominal segments are flexed, and an alternative defensive strategy, concealment by digging into sand.  相似文献   

2.
Videotaped recordings of adult lobsters of different molt stages were analyzed. The escape response of adults was compared with that of juveniles recorded in an earlier study. Juvenile lobsters always respond to a threat with escape behavior irrespective of their molt stage, but in adults the probability of eliciting a response was a function of molt stage: more hard-shelled (intermolt stage C) and (premolt stage D) animals tailflipped than did soft-shelled (postmolt stages A and B) animals. The number, frequency, and duration of tailflips, and the average distance swum by animals in each molt stage were measured for the entire escape response, for the initial power swim, and for the subsequent swims. These measurements were used to compute several parameters: velocity, acceleration, force, and work; average distance traveled in a tailflip for each kilogram of body weight (distance/kg/tailflip); and average distance traveled for each bodylength (distance/bodylength). Among adults, intermolt (stage C) lobsters traveled significantly farther and faster than postmolt animals (stages A and B). Among juveniles, late postmolt (stage B) animals traveled farther. Among adults, although the total number of tailflips and the duration of the response were not significantly different among molt stages, the number of tailflips/second (frequency) and distance traveled/kg/tailflip were greater for intermolt animals. In juvenile intermolts, however, frequency and distance/kg/tailflip were markedly lower than in the premolt stages. Although values were lower than intermolts and premolts, postmolt adults sustained their swimming frequency, distance/kg/tailflip, and distance/bodylength for the entire escape distance (as did postmolt juveniles). These parameters then dropped off sharply for both adult and juvenile intermolt and premolt animals in the second half of the escape distance. Post-threat behaviors reveal that stage D animals have the highest aggression index and often attack the presented stimulus, whereas stage A animals are the least likely to approach the stimulus and typically back away in a non-aggressive posture. Thus, although effects of the molt cycle on adult and juvenile escape behavior are similar in some ways, other physical characteristics of adults, such as weight, allometry, and physiology, seem to become important in determining the likelihood of escape behavior and the characteristics of the escape swim in each molt stage.  相似文献   

3.
When attacked, many decapod crustaceans perform tailflips, which are triggered by a neural circuit that includes lateral giant interneurons, medial giant interneurons, and fast flexor motor giant neurons (MoGs). Slipper lobsters (Scyllaridae) lack these giant neurons, and it has been hypothesized that behavioral (e.g., digging) and morphological (e.g., flattening and armor) specializations in this group caused the loss of escape-related giant neurons. To test this hypothesis, we examined a species of spiny lobster, Panulirus argus. Spiny lobsters belong to the sister taxon of the scyllarids, but they have a more crayfish-like morphology than scyllarids and were predicted to have escape-related giant neurons. Ventral nerve cords of P. argus were examined using paraffin-embedded sections and cobalt backfills. We found no escape-related giant neurons and no large axon profiles in the dorsal region of the nerve cord of P. argus. Cobalt backfills showed one fewer fast flexor motor neuron than in species with MoGs and none of the fast flexor motor neurons show any of the anatomical specializations of MoGs. This suggests that all palinuran species lack this giant escape circuit, and that the loss of rapid escape behavior preceded, and may have driven, alternative predator avoidance and anti-predator strategies in palinurans.  相似文献   

4.
Giant interneurones mediate a characteristic `tail flip' escape response of the crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, which move it rapidly away from the source of stimulation. We have analysed the synaptic connections of proprioceptive sensory neurones with one type of giant interneurone, the lateral giant. Spikes in sensory neurones innervating an exopodite-endopodite chordotonal organ in the tailfan, which monitors the position and movements of the exopodite, are followed at a short and constant latency by excitatory postsynaptic potentials in a lateral giant interneurone (LG) recorded in the terminal abdominal ganglion. These potentials are unaffected by manipulation of the membrane potential of LG, by bath application of saline with a low calcium concentration, or by one containing the nicotinic antagonist, curare. The potentials evoked in LG by chordotonal organ stimulation are thus thought to be monosynaptic and electrically mediated. This is the first demonstration that LG receives input from sensory receptors other than exteroceptors in the terminal abdominal ganglion. Accepted: 7 April 1997  相似文献   

5.
Extrinsic modulation of crayfish escape behaviour.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Extrinsic systems were shown to control the excitability of the neurones which mediate tail-flip escape in the crayfish. Restraint suppresses the escape mediated by giant fibres and some, but not all, categories of non-giant mediated escape; autotomy of claws increases the excitability of non-giant mediated escape without affecting the lateral giant reflex. The effects of restraint on the lateral giant reflex result from inhibition rather than reduced facilitation. The inhibition descends from thoracic and higher levels, and the lateral giant escape command neurone appears to be its primary target. Inhibition may serve to shift the control of escape behaviour from short latency 'reflex' systems to more flexible 'voluntary' ones which can produce responses at times most opportune for successful escape.  相似文献   

6.
The aquatic oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus (Lumbriculidae), undergoes a rapid regenerative transformation of its neural circuits following body fragmentation. This type of nervous system plasticity, called neural morphallaxis, involves the remodeling of the giant fiber pathways that mediate rapid head and tail withdrawal behaviors. Extra- and intracellular electrophysiological recordings demonstrated that changes in cellular properties and synaptic connections underlie neurobehavioral plasticity during morphallaxis. Sensory-to-giant interneuron connections, undetectable prior to body injury, emerged within hours of segment amputation. The appearance of functional synaptic transmission was followed by interneuron activation, coupling of giant fiber spiking to motor outputs and overt segmental shortening. The onset of morphallactic plasticity varied along the body axis and emerged more rapidly in segments closer to regions of sensory field overlap between the two giant fiber pathways. The medial and lateral giant fibers were simultaneously activated during a transient phase of network remodeling. Thus, synaptic plasticity at sensory-to-giant interneuron connections mediates escape circuit morphallaxis in this regenerating annelid worm.  相似文献   

7.
Climbing fiber projections to the cerebellar paramedian lobule were investigated electrophysiologically by stimulation of bilateral superficial radial nerve (SR) and superficial peroneal nerve (SP) in the cat anesthetized with pentobarbitone. In the medial zone of the paramedian lobule, short latency climbing fiber responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SR were recorded rostrally from the top caudal part of the intermediate folia and short latency responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SP were obtained caudally from the bottom caudal part of the folia. In the central zone, long latency responses to stimulation of the bilateral SR and SP were obtained. "Four limbs area" in which these responses were recorded was 1.0-1.2 mm in width. Short latency responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SR were observed rostrally from this area, and short and long latency responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SP were distributed caudally from this area. In the lateral zone, short and long latency responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SR were recorded rostrally from the rostral part of the intermediate folia, and long latency responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SP were observed caudally from the caudal part of the folia. In the most lateral zone, short and long latency responses to stimulation of the ipsilateral SR were obtained rostrally from the rostral part of the intermediate folia, and long latency responses to stimulation of ipsilateral SP were recorded only in the bottom caudal part of the folia caudally from the caudal part of the folia.  相似文献   

8.
Unit activity was recorded extracellularly from the pontomedullary reticular nuclei of kittens aged 1–5 and 15–30 days, immobilized with diplacin. Properties of neurons located in the medial and lateral zones were compared. As regards the amplitude of spike potentials and types of spontaneous and evoked activity, the cells of the two groups were shown to differ. Tetanic stimulation with a frequency of 300 Hz caused a decrease in the medial zone but an increase in the lateral zone in the number of responding units compared with responses to single stimulation. In neurons of the medial zone intensification of spontaneous activity in the interval between stimuli was more marked and continued after the end of stimulation for a long time. It is suggested that units whose activity is recorded in the medial and lateral zones are mainly giant densely branched and reticular sparsely branched neurons respectively. The difference in the characteristics of activity is connected with the geometry of the dendrites and the foci of their maximal branching.Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 2, pp. 140–148, March–April, 1982.  相似文献   

9.
We describe functional and anatomical correlates of the reorganization of giant nerve fiber-mediated escape reflexes in body fragments of an aquatic oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus, a species that reproduces asexually by fragmentation. Since fragments from any axial position always regenerate short heads (seven or eight segments long) and much longer tail sections, segments originating from posterior fragments become transposed along the longitudinal axis and acquire, by morphallaxis, features of escape reflex organization that conform to their new anterior position. Using noninvasive electrophysiological recordings we have quantified, on a day-to-day and a segment-by-segment basis, the reorganization that occurs in sensory field arrangements of the medial (MGF) and lateral (LGF) giant nerve fibers, as well as changes in giant fiber conduction velocity and morphometry. Our results show that (1) posterior fragments, originally subserved by the LGF sensory field gradually become subserved by the MGF sensory field; (2) appropriate increases in the ratio of MGF:LGF cross-sectional area, perimeter, and conduction velocity accompany the reorganization in giant fiber sensory fields; and (3) sensory field reorganization can be repeatedly reversed by additional amputations. These results demonstrate that the functional organization of escape reflexes is highly plastic and that morphallaxis may result from the counterbalance of morphogenic influences localized within the anterior and posterior ends of regenerating body fragments.  相似文献   

10.
Flies escape danger by jumping into the air and flying away. The giant fibre system (GFS) is the neural circuit that mediates this simple behavioural response to visual stimuli. The sensory signal is received by the giant fibre and relayed to the leg and wing muscle motorneurons. Many of the neurons in the Drosophila GFS are uniquely identifiable and amenable to cell biological, electrophysiological and genetic studies. Here we review the anatomy and development of this system and highlight its utility for studying many aspects of nervous system biology ranging from neural development and synaptic plasticity to the aetiology of neural disorder.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The ultrastructure of synapses between the cord giant fibres (lateral and medial) and the motor giant fibres in crayfish, Astacus pallipes, third abdominal ganglia have been examined. These electrotonic synapses are asymmetrical, they have synaptic vesicles only in the presynaptic fibre, and they have synaptic cleft widths normally of about 100 Å but narrowed to about 50 Å in restricted areas. Localized increases in density of the synaptic cleft and adjacent membranes also occur within a synapse, and synaptic vesicles are most tightly grouped at the membrane in such areas. Tight or gap junctions with 30 Å or narrower widths have not been found, but the junctions probably function in a similar way to gap junctions.Three small nerves are closely associated with the synapses between the giant fibres. One of these small nerves has round synaptic vesicles and is thought to be excitatory on morphological grounds; one has flattened vesicles and is thought to be inhibitory; and one is postsynaptic to the lateral giant and the two small presynaptic nerves. It is proposed that these small nerves modulate activity in the much larger giant fibre synapse.  相似文献   

12.
The development of the shape and structure of somites in the teleost Brachydanio rerio was studied in embryos under normal conditions and in immobilized embryos. Three different immobilization methods were applied: enclosure in agar, a glass rod in the neural tube and anaesthesia in MS-222. When the performance of the lateral body movements is prevented, the shape development of the somites in embryos and young larvae becomes reversed. When the agar-immobilization is terminated, the larvae resume their normal movements. In about 10 days, the shape of the somites is again as in control larvae. We conclude, that the lateral body movements have both a shape-determining and a shape-stabilizing role during the early stages of somite morphogenesis. It is suggested that in normal embryos differences in shortening between lateral and medial muscle fibres, cause differences in longitudinal growth of the muscle fibres and that the oblique muscle fibre arrangement is a consequence of these differences in growth. In immobilized embryos and larvae, the longitudinal growth of the muscle fibres is decreased. Also the difference in the longitudinal growth rate between lateral and medial muscle fibres diminishes in all somites. We conclude that for the normal morphogenesis of the somites the performance of the specific function, that is to bring about lateral body movements, is required. We suggest, that the impact of the lateral body movements on the development of the structure of the somites is mediated through adaptive growth of the muscle fibres. The suggestion may also apply to the development of the pinnate structure of muscles of higher vertebrates.  相似文献   

13.
During postembryonic development of insects, sensorimotor pathways, which generate specific behaviors, undergo maturational changes. It is less clear whether such pathways are typically stable, or undergo further maturation, during the adult stage. In the present study, we have examined this issue by multilevel analysis of a simple model system, the escape behavior of the cockroach, from identified synapses to behavior. We show that the escape system is highly responsive immediately after the molt to adulthood, but that the latency of escape responses was not at its typical value immediately after the molt to adult. The latency of escape behavior increased over the first 30 days of adult life, perhaps indicating maturational adjustments of the escape sensorimotor pathway. The first station in the escape circuitry is the synaptic connections between the cercal wind receptors and the giant interneurons. We measured unitary excitatory synaptic potentials between single sensory neurons and an identified giant interneuron (GI(2)). We found a decrease in the synaptic strength between identified cercal hairs from a single column and GI(2) over the first month after the adult molt. Consequently, the latency and the number of action potentials of GI(2) in response to natural stimuli increased and decreased respectively during this time. Thus, we show that both behavioral performance and the wind sensitivity of GI(2) decreased over the first month after molt. We conclude that the cockroach escape system undergoes further sensorimotor maturation over a period of 1 month, and that cellular changes correlate with, or predict, some changes in behavioral performance.  相似文献   

14.
1. Decrement of the lateral giant fibre escape response was studied in intact, restrained, crayfish and in those with the ventral nerve cord transected at the thoracic-abdominal level. 2. Taps (delivered at rates of 1 per 5 min to the abdomen) depressed responsiveness to about 50% of its inital value in 10 trials, for both intact and operated animals. 3. With additional stimulation, responsiveness dropped to near zero for both groups. Recovery was negligible 2 h later, but nearly complete after an additional 24 h rest. 4. Protection against response decrement in this situation was obtained by directly activating the cord giant fibres 30 msec prior to the tactile stimulus. The directly-elicited giant fibre spikes which follow the tactile stimulus do not influence the course of response decrement. 5. The results establish the decrement as centrally mediated habituation, and minimize the role of receptor alterations or descending neuronal influences in the behavioural change. 6. A comparison is made between the properties of hibituation and the homosynaptic depression of afferent to interneurone synapses that is presumed to be the physiological mechanism of habituation in this situation.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The anatomical organization of the two dorsal giant fiber systems of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris is demonstrated in whole mounts and serial-section reconstructions based on backfillings of the ventral nerve cord with cobalt chloride. Both the medial and lateral fiber systems can be labeled selectively over more than ten body segments. They show a characteristic segmental pattern of collaterals with some modification in tail segments and of dorsal plasma protrusions in the unpaired medial giant fiber presumably representing openings in the myelin sheath. We found no multisegmental cobalt transport in other large neurons of the nerve cord. Cobalt passes through the segmentai septa between consecutive axonal elements of the metameric giant fibers and presumably also through commissural contacts between specific collaterals of the lateral giant fibers. Since these sites of contact are known to represent electrical synapses, cobalt coupling may, in L. terrestris, correlate with functional electrotonic coupling.Abbreviations CL collateral of lateral giant fiber - CM collateral of medial giant fiber - GIN giant interneuron - LGF lateral giant fiber - MGF medial giant fiber - SN segmental nerve  相似文献   

16.
Focal potentials (FP) in segments L6–L7 of the ventral horn, evoked by stimulation of the motor cortex with series of stimuli of threshold magnitude for the flexor nerve response, were studied in acute experiments on cats. Appreciable differences were found to exist between the FP arising in the medial zone (layer VIII of Rexed) and those in the inner and outer parts of the lateral zone (layer IX). The FP of the medial zone appear earlier than in other zones (with a latency of 5–12 msec); they are multiphasic, negative components predominating over the positive ones. The FP from the inner part of layer IX possess the largest amplitude (up to 500 µV), a latency of 7–13 msec, a large first negative phase, and marked late positivity. Positive — negative FP (latency 9–15 msec) of small amplitude are recorded from the outermost portion of the ventral horn. The FP of the three zones mentioned above differ also with respect to other functional criteria. The FP of the medial zone are assumed to reflect the realization at the segmental level of the extrapyramidal component of descending cortical activity, the FP of both lateral zones reflecting reciprocal interrelations between postsynaptic processes in the motoneurons of flexor and extensor nuclei during implementation of a cortical motor reaction.I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 175–184, March–April, 1971.  相似文献   

17.
Summary This study provides neuroanatomical and electrophysiological evidence that an arrangement of three dorsal giant fibers, functioning as two distinct and dichotomous conduction pathways, has been evolutionarily conserved within the three major orders of aquatic and terrestrial oligochaetes. The medial giant fiber (MGF), activated by afferents of anterior segments, initiates anterior shortening; whereas, the two lateral giant fibers (LGFs), activated in synchrony by afferents of posterior segments, initiate a different response (usually tail withdrawal). Notwithstanding these common features, the design and function of LGF systems differ considerably in aquatic and terrestrial groups. In posterior segments of aquatic species, LGFs are disproportionately larger and conduct faster than MGFs. This contrasts with posterior segments of earthworms in which LGFs are smaller and conduct slower than MGFs.In addition, in aquatic tubificids, a single LGF spike is sufficient to evoke rapid and complete tail withdrawal, whereas a pair of closely-spaced LGF spikes are needed to elicit posterior shortening in earthworms. The graded nature of earthworm escape seems appropriate for worms that burrow in relatively hard substrates and may frequently encounter inanimate stimuli that evoke meaningless giant fiber spiking. On the other hand, the all-or-none nature of the tubificid escape appears advantageous for relatively sedentary worms that are vulnerable to intense predation but reside in aqueous sediments where triggering of giant fiber spikes by non-threatening stimuli is infrequent.Our studies suggest that anatomical and physiological modifications of giant fiber pathways in aquatic and terrestrial worms have occurred during the evolution of oligochaete nervous systems. We hypothesize that differential predation pressures, together with fundamental differences in lifestyle and habitat, have led to this divergence in the structure and function of evolutionarily conserved sets of homologous giant interneurons.Abbreviations HRP horse raddish peroxidase - LGF lateral giant fiber - MGF medial giant fiber - VNC ventral nerve cord  相似文献   

18.
The receptive field of a sensory neuron is known as that region in sensory space where a stimulus will alter the response of the neuron. We determined the spatial dimensions and the shape of receptive fields of electrosensitive neurons in the medial zone of the electrosensory lateral line lobe of the African weakly electric fish, Gnathonemus petersii, by using single cell recordings. The medial zone receives input from sensory cells which encode the stimulus amplitude. We analysed the receptive fields of 71 neurons. The size and shape of the receptive fields were determined as a function of spike rate and first spike latency and showed differences for the two analysis methods used. Spatial diameters ranged from 2 to 36 mm (spike rate) and from 2.45 to 14.12 mm (first spike latency). Some of the receptive fields were simple consisting only of one uniform centre, whereas most receptive fields showed a complex and antagonistic centre-surround organisation. Several units had a very complex structure with multiple centres and surrounding-areas. While receptive field size did not correlate with peripheral receptor location, the complexity of the receptive fields increased from rostral to caudal along the fish's body.  相似文献   

19.
Regeneration of Rapid Escape Reflex Pathways in Earthworms   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
SYNOPSIS. The medial and lateral giant nerve fibers in the earthworm,Eisenia foetida, regenerate cell-specific connections and recoverthrough-conduction capabilities in as little as 1–2 daysafter ventral nerve cord (VNC) transection Similar cell-specificreconnections between giant fibers occur approximately 4–10days after grafting together two posterior pieces of worms ortransplanting lengths of VNC from donor to recipient worms fromwhich a comparable length of VNC has been removed In the lattercase, touch-sensory and giant motor neurons within the transplantedVNC also regenerate, leading to restoration of escape reflexfunction in segments receiving the transplant Results from heterotopicallytransplanted VNC indicate that both central and peripheral regenerationis cell-specific, but specificity is sufficiently broad to includesegmentally homologous target cells from body regions otherthan those of the transplant origin E. foetida and related speciesmay be useful for studying the extent to which differentiatednervous systems, composed of serially homologous neuronal networks,can be remodelled by experimental manipulations such as graftsand transplants.  相似文献   

20.
Summary We have investigated the connectivity of four classes of mechanosensory afferents to giant interneurons in the earthwormLumbricus. Three of these classes of afferents change their specification for connection to medial giant (MGF) and lateral giant (LGF) fibers along the length of the animal. Near the caudal end, stimulation of touch, pressure and small tactile fibers generates excitatory post-synaptic potentials, epsp's, in the two LGF's but not in the MGF. Near the rostral end these afferents produce much smaller epsp's in the LGFs but produce large epsp's in the MGF. In the middle region of the animal an overlap region exists where both giant fibers receive approximately equal inputs from these afferents. The amplitude of these inputs are reduced compared to the maxima seen at either end. The fourth class of sensory afferents investigated, the stretch neurons, have no synaptic effect on the giant fibers anywhere in the nerve cord.These results explain at least part of the basis, in neuronal connectivity, for the differences in response to tactile stimulation of the head and tail segments previously characterized in terms of behavior and giant fiber impulse activity. In this system developmental mechanisms generating synaptic connectivity patterns have coded certain classes of homologous afferent neurons and interneurons to make different connections in different segments.Abbreviations MGF medial giant fiber - LGF lateral giant fiber - SN1 first segmental root - SN2 second segmental root - SN3 third segmental root - RIN giant interneuron  相似文献   

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