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Peculiarities of orthodromic inhibition in pacemaker neurons in Helix pomatia
Authors:E N Sokolov  T A Tavzarashvili
Abstract:We used the intracellular recording method to study the effect of a group of nerves in the visceral complex on the activity of a pacemaking giantneuron located in the peripheral part of the visceral ganglion in a mollusk. Single excitations of the left and right pallial, the intestinal, and the anal nerves with electrical stimuli evoked similar responses, consisting of phases of rapid depolarization (duration 100 msec, amplitude 3–5 mV) and slower hyperpolarization (duration 400 msec, amplitude 5–8 mV). The excitation also had an aftereffect, which was expressed in inhibition of the background activity of the pacemaker for several seconds. The most interesting of the functional characteristics of that response was the effects of summation. With rhythmic excitation by stimuli of low frequency (0.5–1 c/sec) the result of summation was general hyperpolarization of the neuron and the appearance of giant inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSP's) with an amplitude of 12–16 mV. With higher frequency of excitation (2–3 c/sec and upward) we observed depolarization replacing the hyperpolarization of the neuron, but IPSP's of large amplitude were absent. At the end of rhythmic excitation prolonged inhibition of the pacemaker's activity, lasting some minutes, occurred in all cases. This article discusses the possible mechanisms of that type of prolonged inhibition of the pacemaker's activity, the origin of the phases in biphasic responses, and the reasons for differences in the course of summation of biphasic postsynaptic potentials.M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 426–433, July–August, 1971.
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