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The action of spike frequency adaptation in the postural motoneurons of hermit crab abdomen during the first phase of reflex activation
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Jacob?L?KransEmail author  William?D?Chapple
Institution:(1) Department of Physiology and Neurobiology, University of Connecticut, 3107 Horsebarn Hill Rd., Storrs, CT 06269-4156, USA
Abstract: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.
Keywords:Crustacean  Reflex  Spike frequency adaptation  Motoneuron  Intrinsic
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