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1.
Summary The ionic requirements for bursting activity have been investigated in the electrically coupled PD-AB cells group of the Stomatogastric ganglion in the lobster.The passive electrical properties and coupling parameters have been determined in either current or voltage clamp conditions. In voltage clamped cells, the current displayed slow inward transients with superimposed fast transients corresponding respectively to the slow waves and spikes of the coupled undamped cells. The amplitude and frequency of the slow transients were reduced upon hyperpolarization.Cyclic conductance changes were observed with short current pulses, the coupling ratio also changes cyclically being lower during the bursts and slowly increasing during the interburst interval.The slow wave amplitude increased in low K-saline. The post-burst hyperpolarization but not the top level of the wave behaved like a potassium electrode for [K]o higher than 10 mM/l.TEA at low concentration (1 to 5 mM/l) increased the slow wave amplitude by lifting its top level by 10 to 20 mV. The post-burst hyperpolarization remained almost unchanged and its K-dependence was not altered by TEA.Low Na-saline reduced the slow wave amplitude (6 to 11 mV per decade). The Na-dependence increased in the presence of TEA. Slow waves devoid of spikes persisted in 10% Na saline containing TEA. 10–9 M/1 TTX blocked the spikes. 10–7 M/1 TTX blocked the slow waves.Mg-free saline had no effect on the slow wave. In Ca-free saline the cells depolarized and the bursting activity tended to vanish. Repolarization with current led to long lasting slow waves deprived of post-burst hyperpolarization. The bursting ceased when EDTA was added to the Ca-free saline.Cobalt (up to 10 mM/l) was similar to Ca-free saline in its effects; lengthening of the wave and blockage of the repolarization. Replacing Ba for Ca produced large (up to 70 mV) slow waves which were reduced by Co and Ca.Bistable states were observed in various experimental conditions. It is concluded that the slow waves are produced by activation of sodium and calcium currents. The amplitude of the slow wave is modulated by the simultaneous activation of a TEA-sensitive K current. The repolarization is caused by increased K current activated by the inward calcium current. The slow pacemaker potential in the interburst interval corresponds to the slow disappearance of the K current.This work was supported by N.I.H. grant no. 09322, NSF grant no. 00250, and a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship to A.D.S. and by the CNRS and a DGRST grant no. 16501891 to M. Gola. We are grateful to Stuart Thompson and Felix Strumwasser for helpful comments and to Barbara McLean for technical assistance.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Two morphological types of interneurones were found in the brainof Alloeoplana californica (Figs. 1, 2). Both respond to water vibration and to light offset (Fig. 3). These responses are blocked by Mg++ or Cd++ (Fig. 4), and habituate to repetitive stimuli (Figs. 6, 10). Even when the light response is habituated, light offset will dishabituate the vibration response (Figs. 7, 10); no other regime tested produced dishabituation of either response. These neurones receive higher-order sensory input, and make subthreshold excitatory synapses on motor pathways; intracellular tetraethylammonium lengthens the time course of the spikes (Fig. 5), and each such spike elicits a contraction in the anterior margin of the animal. We believe that they form part of the neuronal circuitry underlying arousal.Abbreviation TEA tetraethylammonium  相似文献   

3.
Summary The spike activity of various types of cell responses in the pterothoracic ganglion ofAscalapha odorata (Noctuidae) andEmpyreuma pugione (Arctiidae) was studied. Pure tones (16 kHz forA. odorata and 20 kHz forE. pugione, 45 ms pulses) were presented at a 1 Hz rate over 9 s and at intensities ranging from 25 to 95 dB SPL. The values of the latency period and the interspike intervals allowed us to describe the intensity-latency and intensity-response functions as well as the spike distribution during the responses, the latter being given by the instantaneous frequency, i.e., as the inverse value of the mean of the nine measurements of each interspike interval during the response time. Repeater (RA1 and RA2) is a type of cell response that shows a phasic-tonic spike distribution similar to that of the receptor cells (A1 and A2) (Fig. 3), but that differs from the latter in a longer (ca. 1.0 ms) latency period, a lower number of spikes per pulse, and a lower instantaneous frequency during the response time (Tables 1 and 2). Another repeater type of cell response (RA) differs from the receptors and the other two repeaters in the form of its intensity-latency function, having the widest dynamic range (from 40 to 50 dB), and exhibiting the highest maximal number of spikes per pulse of all the response types recorded (Fig. 2, Table 1). We recorded also strictly phasic responses (1 or 2 spikes per pulse), which are considered as pulse markers. Of these, one (PM1 has a shorter latency period (ca. 10 ms) and higher sensitivity than the other (PM2) (Fig. 4). Two other types of cell responses showed significant differences in their latency period and the number of spikes per pulse under binaural and monoaural stimulation and are assumed to be the consequence of binaural summation, one by inhibition (BSI) and the other by excitation (BSE) (Fig. 5); they also differ in the spike distribution during the response. For the other types of cell responses recorded we used names that reflect the form of their spike distribution: chopper, build, On-S, tonic, and suppression (Figs. 8–12). The spike distributions during the response time recorded in the pterothoracic ganglion of these two noctuoid moths are compared with the temporal patterns of discharge described in the auditory neurons of the first relay stations of birds and mammals. Our results suggest that in the auditory pathway of the two moth species there is divergence, which could facilitate the parallel processing of the sensory information, and convergence, that could play a role in the directional localization of the acoustic signals. The complexity of this central auditory processing in animals with only 2 receptors in each peripheral organ is considerable, and we discuss its possible biological meaning.  相似文献   

4.
Mechanosensory lateral line units recorded from the medulla (medial octavolateralis nucleus) and midbrain (torus semicircularis) of the bottom dwelling catfish Ancistrus sp. responded to water movements caused by an object that passed the fish laterally. In terms of peak spike rate or total number of spikes elicited responses increased with object speed and sometimes showed saturation (Figs. 7, 14). At sequentially greater distances the responses of most medullary lateral line units decayed with object distance (Fig. 11). Units tuned to a certain object speed or distance were not found. The signed directionality index of most lateral line units was between –50 and +50, i.e. these units were not or only slightly sensitive to the direction of object motion (Figs. 10, 17). However, some units were highly directionally sensitive in that the main features of the response histograms and/or peak spike rates clearly depended on the direction of object movement (e.g. Fig. 9C, D and Fig. 16). Midbrain lateral line units of Ancistrus may receive input from more than one sensory modality. All bimodal lateral line units were OR units, i.e., the units were reliably driven by a unimodal stimulus of either modality. Units which receive bimodal input may show an extended speed range (e.g. Fig. 18).Abbreviations MON medial octavolateralis nucleus - MSR mean spike rate - PSR peak spike rate - p-p peak-to-peak - SDI signed directionality index  相似文献   

5.
Cockroaches (Periplaneta americana) respond to air displacement produced by an approaching predator by turning and running away. A set of 4 bilateral pairs of ventral giant interneurons is important in determining turn direction. Wind from a given side is known to produce more spikes, an earlier onset of the spike trains, and different fine temporal patterning, in the ipsilateral vs the contralateral set of these interneurons. Here we investigate which of these spike train parameters the cockroach actually uses to determine the direction it will turn.We delivered controlled wind puffs from the right front, together with intracellular injection of spike trains in a left ventral giant interneuron, under conditions where the animal could make normally directed turning movements of the legs and body. In trials where our stimuli caused the left side to give both the first spike and more total spikes than the right, but where our injected spike train included none of the normal fine temporal patterning, 92% of the evoked turns were to the rightopposite of normal (Figs. 4–6). In trials where the left side gave the first spike, but the right side gave more spikes, 100% of the turns were to the left-the normal direction (Figs. 8, 9). Comparable results were obtained when each of the left giant interneurons 1, 2 or 3 were electrically stimulated, and when either weak or stronger wind puffs were used. Stimulating a left giant interneuron electrically in the absence of a wind puff evoked an escape-like turn on 9% of the trials, and these were all to the right (Fig. 9).These results indicate that fine temporal patterning in the spike trains is not necessary, and information about which side gives the first spike is not sufficient, to determine turn direction. Rather, the key parameter appears to be relative numbers of action potentials in the left vs the right group of cells. These conclusions were supported by similar experiments in which extracellular stimulation of several left giant interneurons was paired with right wind (Figs. 11, 12).Abbreviations GI giant interneuron - vGI ventral giant interneuron - dGI dorsal giant interneuron - LY Lucifer yellow - CF carboxyfluorescein  相似文献   

6.
Summary Lobe spreading behavior was studied by recording electromyograms from the muscles which spread the labellar lobes, the retractors of the furca (RF) inPhormia regina. RF responses and lobe spreading could be elicited by stimulating labellar, but not tarsal, taste hairs with sucrose (Fig. 3). RF activity was important to spread the lobes at the beginning of a meal, but was not necessary for continued feeding (Fig. 4).Temporal summation between sugar receptor spikes was necessary to elicit RF responses. Central response decrement occurs independently for different labellar hairs and may participate in the termination of motor responses.RF responses were more probable and more intense when either the sucrose concentration of the stimulus or the number of hairs stimulated was increased (Fig. 7). Stimulation with NaCl had no effect on the response to simultaneous sucrose stimulation of other hairs (Table 1).Feeding caused decreases in the probability and intensity of motor responses, but did not alter chemosensory responses (Figs. 8 and 9). Section of either the recurrent or median abdominal nerves prevented this postingestional inhibition of lobe spreading (Fig. 9).These results are discussed with regard to the possible role that regulation of lobe spreading may play in the control of food intake.This work was supported by United States Public Health Service Training Grant 5T01 GM 00457-13S2 and by a grant from the National Science Foundation to Dr. Vincent G. Dethier. I wish to thank Dr. Dethier for his support and encouragement.  相似文献   

7.
In this paper, I have examined the behavioral functions of feedback loops between the cockroach (Periplaneta americana) giant interneurons (GIs) and the flight thoracic rhythm generator.
1.  During sequences of flight-like activity, I have recorded from identified giant interneurons from the dorsal (dGIs) or the ventral (vGIs) group and stimulated them either with current pulses or with wind stimuli delivered to the cerci.
2.  Removal of the dGIs' activity which normally occurs during natural flight reduced both the wingbeat frequency and flight duration, and increased the variability of the wingbeat frequency (Fig. 6). Intracellular rhythmic stimulation of a single dGI during flight increased the wingbeat frequency and the duration of flight (Figs. 7, 8). The wind sensitivity of the dGIs was unchanged during flight compared with at rest (Fig. 2). A single short burst of spikes in a dGI had complex effects on the flight muscle recording but apparently did not reset the flight rhythm (Fig. 9). These results suggest that the rhythmic activation of the dGIs during natural light participates in the control of the wingbeat frequency and the flight duration (Fig. 12).
3.  In contrast to the dGIs, the vGIs became significantly less sensitive to wind during flight (Fig. 3). Stimulation of one of the vGIs (GI1) with 10 spikes at roughly 180/s during flight evokes immediate cessation of flight (Figs. 10, 11). Given that the vGI activity can stop flight, the inhibition imposed on the ventral group during flight appears to be designed to prevent this group from interfering with the flight program (Fig. 12).
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8.
Summary Electroretinograms (ERG) were recorded from dark- and chromatic-adapted compound eyes in the dusk-active firefly,Photinus pyralis , at different wavelengths ranging from 320 to 700 run and over 4.5 log units change in stimulus intensity. ERG waveforms differed in the short (near-UV and violet) and long (yellow) wavelengths (Fig. 1). Waveform differences were quantitated by analysis of rise and fall times as a function of the amplitude of the response. Rise times were found to be relatively constant for all stimulus wavelengths. However, variations in the fall times were detected and followed characteristically different functions for short and long wavelengths (Fig. 2).No significant differences in the slopes of the Vlog-I curves at different stimulus wavelengths were observed (Fig. 3).Spectral sensitivity curves obtained from the ventral sector in dark- and chromatic-adapted conditions revealed peaks in the short ( max 400 nm: Fig. 4; max 430 nm: Fig. 5 A; and max 380 nm; Fig. 5B) and long ( max 570 nm: Figs. 4, 5) wavelengths, suggesting the presence of two spectral mechanisms. The long wavelength (yellow) mechanism was in close tune with the species bioluminescence emission spectrum (Fig. 4B).This investigation was supported in part by NIH Research Grant # EY-00490 (to R.M.C.); Research Grant # 01794N from the Research Foundation of the City University of New York (to A.B.L.); NIGMS Training Grant #1 TO 2 GM 05010-01 MARC (to J.A.H.); and NSF Grant # HES-75-09824 (to C.O.T.). We thank Tom Jensen for technical assistance, Barry Schuttler for his courtesy in allowing us to collect fireflies at his farm, Jean Lall for editorial assistance, and the two anonymous referees whose comments added considerably to the quality of this paper.  相似文献   

9.
1.  By penetrating axons in the ventral nerve cord of the dragonfly, Aeshna umbrosa, we measured the intracellular responses of target-selective visual interneurons to movement of black square targets ranging from 1° to 32° visual angle at several levels of mean background luminance.
2.  Neuronal responses, measured both in number of spikes and in the magnitude of integrated postsynaptic potentials, showed a preference for larger target size at lower mean luminance (Table 1, Figs. 1–3). The latency of postsynaptic potential (psp) and spike responses from onset of target movement increased with a decrease in mean luminance (Fig. 1).
3.  A measure of mean target size preference (Eqn. 1) for one identified interneuron (MDT4) in both laboratory and outdoor lighting shows a continuous decrease of preferred size with increases of mean luminance over more than 4 orders of magnitude.
4.  The time to reach the new steady state of cell response after the decrease of mean luminance was ordinarily less than 30 s, but sometimes longer (Fig. 4).
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10.
  1. Extracellular recordings from wide-field nonhabituating non-directional (ND) motion detecting neurons in the second optic chiasma of the locust Locusta migratoria are presented. The responses to various types of stepwise moving spot and bar stimuli were monitored (Fig. 1)
  2. Stepwise motion in all directions elicited bursts of spikes. The response is inhibited at stimulus velocities above 5°/s. At velocities above 10°/s the ND neurons are slightly more sensitive to motion in the horizontal direction than to motion in the vertical direction (Fig. 2). The ND cells have a preference for small moving stimuli (Fig. 3).
  3. The motion response has two peaks. The latency of the second peak depends on stimulus size and stimulus velocity. Increasing the height from 0.1 to 23.5° of a 5°/s moving bar results in a lowering of this latency time from 176 to 130 ms (Fig. 4). When the velocity from a single 0.1° spot is increased from 1 to 16°/s, the latency decreases from 282 to 180 ms (Figs. 5–6).
  4. A change-of-direction sensitivity is displayed. Stepwise motion in one particular direction produces a continuous burst of spike discharges. Reversal or change in direction leads to an inhibition of the response (Fig. 7).
  5. It shows that non-directional motion perception of the wide-field ND cells can simply be explained by combining self-and lateral inhibition.
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11.
Summary InGryllus bimaculatus females one foreleg was amputated at the coxa-trochanter joint in the 2nd, 4th or 8th/9th larval instar. A leg of up to normal length is regenerated (Fig. 1) but it lacks a functional ear. In spite of the, usually shorter, regenerated foreleg, the adult one-eared crickets show no impairments in walking when tested on a locomotion compensator. Without sound they walk erratically and most of them weakly circle towards the intact side (Fig. 2).With calling song presentation three response types can be distinguished:tracking (Fig. 3A), hanging on (Fig. 3B) or continuouscircling towards the intact side (Fig. 3C, D). Turning tendencies in monaurals increase with song intensity and exceed those of intact and bilaterally operated animals (Fig. 4). Course deviations towards the intact side also slightly increase with intensity (Fig. 5). Course stability is reduced compared to that of intact animals but exceeds that of bilaterally operated crickets (Figs. 5, 6). It is best at 60 dB and deteriorates at higher sound intensities (Fig. 6). The percentage of monaurals tracking or hanging on decreases with increasing intensity (Fig. 7B). Tracking is established in most animals but it is limited to a narrow intensity range (Fig. 7A, C). Apart from an increased percentage of tracking after early operations (Fig. 7D), there are no prominent changes in orientational parameters with the date of foreleg amputation.Reamputation of the regenerated leg in the adult monaurals does not significantly impair acoustic orientation (Figs. 8, 9), but occlusion of the ipsilateral prothoracic spiracle does (Figs. 10, 11).An attempt is made to correlate the behavioral performance with the activity of auditory interneurons which have undergone morphological and physiological changes (Fig. 12).  相似文献   

12.
  1. Polarization sensitivity (PS) was examined in photoreceptors and lamina monopolar cells (LMCs) in two species of crayfish, Procambarus clarkii and Pacifasticus leniusculus. The measurements were made with intracellular recordings and broad field illumination.
  2. PS is about 40% greater in Pacifasticus than in Procambarus (Table 1). In both species the LMC stationary PS profiles (estimated with flashes) are similar to those of receptors (Figs. 1 and 2). Both receptor and LMC sensitivity profiles are well described by cos2 θ functions (Fig. 3). PS was observed in all receptors and 78% of LMCs.
  3. When stimulated with a rotating polarizer, receptors and LMCs exhibit membrane potential modulation with phase predicted by the stationary PS profile (Fig. 5). In photoreceptors, the polarization-elicited percent modulation falls off steeply as intensity increases. The LMC modulation is stronger than that in receptors and relatively insensitive to the mean intensity (Figs. 6 to 8). For low intensities the LMC modulation is 100%. The LMC dynamic behavior is consistent with either an opponency mechanism or strong but polarization-insensitive lateral inhibition.
  4. Receptors and LMCs exhibit steady-state differential sensitivity to stationary e-vector orientation (Fig. 9).
  5. About 10% of the LMC neurons exhibit PS maxima separated by 90°. These results imply a nonlinear summation of signals from orthogonal receptor channels (Fig. 10).
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13.
Summary In order to evaluate the role of glucose-phosphate isomerase (GPI) inFundulus heteroclitus, the isozymes and allozymes were purified and some of their physical and kinetic properties determined.Isozymes were purified from both liver (GPI-B) and muscle (GPI-A) tissue (Tables 1, 2). Gel filtration of the native enzyme and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that all forms are dimers of approximately 110,000 Daltons (Figs. 4, 5). Although thermal stability studies revealed no differences between the allozymes, the isozymes were clearly different (Figs. 6, 7). Kinetic analysis showed further differences between isozymes inK m for substrate andK I for 6-phosphogluconate (Figs. 8, 9; Table 3). No significant differences were found between the allozymes of the B-locus under the conditions employed in this study.Based on the tissue specificities and the functional differences between isozymes, we propose a possible regulatory role for GPI-B inF. heteroclitus. The sensitivity of this isozyme to 6-phosphogluconate inhibition may allow GPI-B to act as a regulatory enzyme in the partitioning of carbon flow between glycolysis and the hexose monophosphate shunt.Abbreviations me -mercaptoethanol - F6P fructose-6-phosphate - G1P glucose-1-phosphate - G6P glucose-6-phosphate - G6Pase glucose-6-phosphatase - G6PDH glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase - GPI glucosephosphate isomerase - HK hexokinase - HMP hexose monophosphate shunt - 6PG 6-phosphogluconate - PGM phosphoglucomutase Supported in part by: NSF grants DEB-76-19877 to D.A.P. and PCM 77-16838 to B.D.S., NIH Biomedical grant 5-50-7RR07-041 and a grant from the National Geographic Society. G.D.S. and R.V.B. are NIH trainees supported by a training grant (No. HD00139) to the Department of Biology, The Johns Hopkins University. This is contribution No. 1052 from the Department of Biology  相似文献   

14.
Summary The prepacemaker nucleus (PPN) in the midbrain of the gymnotiform electric fishEigenmannia provides the only known neuronal input to the medullary pacemaker nucleus, which triggers each electric organ discharge (EOD) cycle by a single command pulse. Electrical stimulation of the PPN elicited two distinct forms of modulations in the pacemaker activity, brief accelerations, hence referred to as chirps, and gradual frequency shifts with a time constant of approximately one second. The associated EOD modulations were indistinguishable from natural communication signals. Depending upon the site of stimulation, the two forms of modulation could be elicited alone or superimposed (Fig. 1). Stimulation sites eliciting only chirps could be separated from sites eliciting only gradual shifts by as little as 60 m. The magnitude of the elicited chirps depended upon the timing of the pulse stimulus with reference to the phase of the pacemaker cycle (Figs. 2, 3).Extracellular and intracellular recordings of single PPN neurons revealed that an action potential from a single neuron generates a chirp, and that the magnitude of the chirp depends upon the timing of the action potential with reference to the phase of the pacemaker cycle (Figs. 4, 5). The spike activity of these neurons had no relation to the jamming avoidance response (JAR), suggesting independent neuronal mechanisms for chirps and the JAR. Depolarization of such neurons by current injection produced bursts of chirps (Fig. 6), and intracellular injection of Lucifer Yellow identified these cells as a large type of PPN neuron which could also be retrogradely labeled from the pacemaker with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (Fig. 7). We were unable to record from neurons linked to gradual shifts of the pacemaker frequency, although the JAR was elicited continually during the experiments. A smaller cell type of the PPN which can be retrogradely labeled with HRP but so far could not be recorded may control gradual frequency shifts.Abbreviations PPN prepacemaker nucleus - JAR jamming avoidance response - EOD electric organ discharge - Df neighbor's EOD frequency (or its mimic) minus animal's own EOD frequency (or its mimic)  相似文献   

15.
We present, in an easy to use form, the large deviation theory of the binomial distribution: how to approximate the probability ofk or more successes inn independent trials, each with success probabilityp, when the specified fraction of successes,a≡k/n, satisfies 0<p<a<1. Supported by NIH grant GM 36230 and NSF grant DMS 8601986. Supported by NIH grant GM 36230 and a grant from the System Development Foundation.  相似文献   

16.
The membrane potentials of single smooth muscle fibers of various regions of the stomach were measured, and do not differ from those measured in intestinal muscle. Spontaneous slow waves with superimposed spikes could be recorded from the longitudinal and circular muscle of the antrum. The development of tension was preceded by spikes but often tension appeared only when the slow waves were generated. Contracture in high K solution developed at a critical membrane potential of -42 mv. MnCl2 blocked the spike generation, then lowered the amplitude of the slow wave. On the other hand, withdrawal of Na+, or addition of atropine and tetrodotoxin inhibited the generation of most of the slow waves but a spike could still be elicited by electrical stimulation. Prostigmine enhanced and prolonged the slow wave; acetylcholine depolarized the membrane without change in the frequency of the slow waves. Chronaxie for the spike generation in the longitudinal muscle of the antrum was 30 msec and conduction velocity was 1.2 cm/sec. The time constant of the foot of the propagated spike was 28 msec. The space constants measured from the longitudinal and circular muscles of the antrum were 1.1 mm and 1.4 mm, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Three species of Gymnotid fish, two species ofHypopomus andRhamphichthys rostratus, each having pulse type electric organ discharges (EOD) of different durations were studied to learn if any correlation exists between the spectral composition of the species specific EOD pulse and the frequency response characteristics of that species' electroreceptors. The receptor population consisted of two major categories (examples in Fig. 3). One category, termed pulse marker receptors, responded to suprathreshold stimulus pulses with a single spike at a short (<2 ms) latency. These receptors were tuned to the higher frequency components of a species' EOD (Fig. 4A) and were always 5 to 10 dB less sensitive than any other electroreceptors within a given species. The second major receptor category, burst duration coders, responded to an electrical stimulus with a burst of spikes at a longer latency, burst length was a function of stimulus amplitude. This second category could be further divided into three sub-categories according to the receptors' frequency response characteristics. The most commonly seen subcategory, wide band receptors (Fig. 4B), responded best to stimuli having frequencies equal to the dominant frequency component of the species' EOD in the two species ofHypopomus studied. A second subcategory, narrow band receptors (Fig. 4 A), had frequency response characteristics similar to those of the pulse marker receptors; however, these had thresholds 10 dB lower than those of the pulse marker. The third subcategory of burst duration coders, low frequency receptors (Fig. 4 C, D), responded best to stimulus frequencies ranging from about 50 to 150 Hz. Mechanisms of coding stimulus amplitude and responses to prolonged sinusoidal electrical stimuli were also studied in the various receptor types.It is suggested that the differences in the major receptor types and the different frequency response characteristics of the electroreceptors within a given species allows the animals to identify and evaluate signals resulting from their own EOD, the EODs of conspecifics and electrical stimuli generated by other species of electric fish.Supported by NIH Grant #1 RO1 NS 12337-01  相似文献   

18.
Facilitation at crayfish neuromuscular junctions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Electrophysical recordings from opener muscle fibers in the crayfishProcambarus clarkii (Fig. 1) show that pre-synaptic facilitation at terminals of the single excitatory axon usually decays in a dual-exponential fashion after a single pulse or after a train of pulses (Figs. 2, 3, 7, 9), as has been reported for frog neuromuscular junctions (Mallart and Martin, 1967) and squid giant synapses (Charlton and Bittner, 1974, 1976). Furthermore, the second component of decay at crayfish synapses is associated with a break in the monotonic decay of the first component, a result which suggests that the decay of facilitation is not due to the simple diffusion of some substance (such as calcium) from specialized release sites.The growth of facilitation at all opener synapses during trains of equalinterval stimuli could not be predicted by assuming that each pulse contributed an equal amount of facilitation which summed linearly with that remaining from all previous stimuli (Figs. 4, 6; Table 2), as reported for synapses in frog and squid. During high frequency stimulation (>40 Hz), those terminals which facilitate dramatically (highF e synapses) show much greater amounts of facilitation than that predicted by the linear summation model (Figs. 4, 8), whereas other terminals (lowF e synapses) show much less facilitation than predicted (Fig. 6). The rate of growth of facilitation was often very constant at various stimulus rates in highF e or mixed type synapses (Figs. 4, 8, 10)-a result not predicted by the linear summation model. Finally, when highF e synapses were stimulated at different frequencies, the rate of growth of facilitation changed dramatically in a fashion not predictable using linear summation (Mallert and Martin, 1967) or power law (Linder, 1974) models.  相似文献   

19.
1.  The swimmerets ofJasus lalandii, in contrast to those well known in the nephropid lobsters (e.g.Homarus) and astacurans (crayfish), do not display spontaneous antero-posterior beating, but are either apposed actively to the ventral surface of the abdomen, or rotated outward (Fig. 2). These movements are imposed by the geometrical arrangement of the bicondylar joints at the base of the swimmeret (Fig. 3), and involve contraction of either the remotor muscle, or the promotor-rotator muscles (Figs. 2, 3). Each swimmeret includes a short, thick blade-like exopodite that contains two antagonistic muscles, a large curler and a small adductor muscle (Fig. 3). Each swimmeret is innervated by 80 motor neurons (MNs) which are disposed in two clusters in the ganglion.
2.  The modulation of the tonic discharge of the muscles which maintain the swimmeret position at rest (remotor and curler) has been studied in two situations: body rolling (Fig. 4) and walking activity (Fig. 5). In the female, in which the most anterior pair of swimmerets are biramous, both endopodite and exopodite curler muscles display the same responses to body rolling (Fig. 4). In all these situations no overt swimmeret movement occurs.
3.  Nevertheless, rhythmicity exists inJasus, but it is limited to the gravid female when the swimmerets bear the eggs (Fig. 6). In contrast to other decapod Crustacea, this swimmeret beating is not metachronous (Fig. 6).
4.  Movement monitoring (Fig. 7) and EMG recordings (Figs. 9, 10) have demonstrated the involvement of the swimmerets in the three phases of the tail flick response (preparation, flexion, extension). During the preparatory phase, in response to mechanical stimulation of the legs, the swimmerets open on the stimulated side (on both sides in the case of a symmetrical stimulation) (Fig. 7). During the rapid abdominal flexion of the tail flick all swimmerets open fully regardless of the stimulus (Figs. 7, 8). Two different units in the rotator muscle EMG are responsible for swimmeret opening during the preparatory and the flexion phases of the tail flick (Figs. 9, 10).
5.  The curler muscle of the endopodite in the female displays antagonistic activities to that of the exopodite during tail flicks (Fig. 10).
6.  Selective swimmeret blockage demonstrates that they contribute to the thrust efficacy in tail flicks. In particular they are responsible for the variation of the maximal force produced at its onset. This effect could be interpreted as a consequence of force redistribution by the swimmerets acting on water flow (produced by the tail fan). This mechanism implies a functional role for the swimmerets in righting and steering responses (Fig. 11).
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20.
Intracellular recordings have been made of responses to step, ramp and sinusoidal changes of light by second-order L-neurones and a third-order neurone, DNI, of locust (Locusta migratoria) ocelli.
1.  The membrane potential at the peak response by an L-neurone to a change in light is proportional to the light increment or decrement, independent of background, over a range of at least 4 log units. As background increases, response latency and time-course decrease, and responses become more phasic (Fig. 1).
2.  Adaptation to a changed mean light level involves a change in sensitivity and a slow change in resting membrane potential, which never adapts completely to dark resting potential in the presence of light (Fig. 3).
3.  L-neurones can follow changes in light which last several seconds, but responses to fast changes are enhanced in amplitude (Figs. 4, 5). An increase in background light causes an increase in the frequency of sinusoidally modulated light at which the largest response occurs (Fig. 4).
4.  The responses of DNI to increased light saturate at lower intensities than those of L-neurones. During adaptation to different background light intensities, there is no change in the input-output relation of the synapse between an L-neurone and DNI (Figs. 6, 7).
5.  For a rapid decrease in light, DNI produces a rebound spike, followed by a period of silence (Figs. 5, 8).
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